3.3 Transport in plants Flashcards

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1
Q

What travels in the xylem?

A

water and soluble minerals

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2
Q

What travels in the phloem?

A

assimilates, e.g sugars

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3
Q

What are dicotyledonous plants?

A

Often flowering, have two seed leaves

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4
Q

Where are the xylem and phloem stored in dicotyledonous plants?

A

In vascular bundles, often with other types of tissues such as collenchyma and sclerenchyma

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5
Q

What is the sheath around the vascular bundle called?

A

Endodermis

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6
Q

What cells do the endodermis contain?

A

A layer of meristem cells

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7
Q

What is the layer of meristem cells in the root endodermis called?

A

The pericycle

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8
Q

State the layers of the vascular bundle in the stem cross section

A

Xylem in the middle, phloem on the outside

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9
Q

What is the role of lignin in the xylem?

A

strengthens the walls and keeps them open

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10
Q

What 3 patterns are there of lignification in the xylem?

A

spiral, annular (rings) or reticular (network of broken rings)

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11
Q

What are the gaps in xylem called?

A

bordered pits

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12
Q

What are the adaptations of the xylem?

A
  • one long column
  • narrow so water column doesn’t break and capillary action can be effective
  • bordered pits allow water movement out
  • lignin patterns allow flexibility
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13
Q

What is the barrier between the sieve elements called?

A

sieve plates

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14
Q

What organelle do companion cells contain a lot of?

A

mitochondria to produce ATP

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15
Q

What are gaps in the cell walls called?

A

plasmodesmata

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16
Q

What is the pathway that only goes through the cell walls?

A

Apoplast

17
Q

What is the pathway that goes through the cytoplasm but not the vacuole?

A

Symplast

18
Q

What is the pathway that goes through the cytoplasm and vacuole?

A

Vacuolar

19
Q

a whole page on movement

A

more ions = lower water potential
flows from high to low

20
Q

Where is water lost during transpiration?

A

stomata and waxy cuticle

21
Q

What is the typical transpiration pathway?

A

xylem to spongy mesophyll to diffuse out of stomata

22
Q

Why is transpiration important?

A

helps to keep the flow of water which maintains plant health by transporting water and minerals around the plant

23
Q

What 4 factors affect transpiration rate?

A
  • light intensity (more = more bc stomata open for photosynthesis)
  • temperature (more = more because more kinetic energy)
  • humidity (more = less)
  • wind (more = more)
  • water availability (less = less)
24
Q

What measures are taken to ensure the potometer is set up correctly?

A
  • set up underwater to prevent air bubbles
  • ensure shoot is healthy
  • cut stem underwater to prevent air in the xylem
  • cut stem at an angle for a large SA:V
  • dry the leaves for maximum diffusion
25
Q

What is the equation for rate of transpiration?

A

pi x r^2 x Length

26
Q

What blocks the water in the apoplast pathway?

A

the casparian strip

27
Q

What happens when the water from the apoplast pathway is pushed into the cell?

A

transporter proteins attach to dissolved minerals to be transported into the medulla and xylem

28
Q

what happens when ions move into the medulla and xylem?

A

lower water potential in the xylem forces water in via osmosis

29
Q

What are the 3 ways water moves up the stem?

A
  • root pressure (water pressure in the root forces it up the xylem)
  • transpiration pull (cohesion in the water column called cohesion-tension theory)
  • capillary action (water attracted to sides of xylem called adhesion)
30
Q

What is a xerophyte (plus examples)?

A

plant adapted to arid conditions (e.g cacti and marram grass)

31
Q

what is a hydrophyte (plus examples)?

A

adapted to live in water (e.g water lillies)

32
Q

What is translocation?

A

the transport of assimilates around the plant

33
Q

What is the process at the source?

A

hydrogen ions (H+) go from companion cell to leaf cell to actively transport sucrose in cotransport into sieve tube element

34
Q

What happens when the hydrogen ions with sucrose enter the phloem?

A

water goes down the water potential into the phloem, pressure builds up so moves to a low hydrostatic pressure .
sucrose moves into sink followed by water