B4f Flashcards

1
Q

What are phloem tubes and what do they do?

A
  • made of columns of living cells with perforated end-plates to allow stuff to flow through
  • transport food substances (mainly sugar) up and down the stem to growing and storage tissues
  • movement of food around a plant is know as translocation
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2
Q

What are xylem vessels and what do they do?

A
  • made of dead cells joined end to end with no end walls between them and a lumen down the middle
  • thick side walls are made of cellulose, are strong and stiff, giving plants support
  • carry water and minerals from the roots up the shoot to leaves in the transpiration stream
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3
Q

What does a root cross-section look like and why?

A
  • roots have to resist crushing as through the soil

- so the xylem is in the centre to give strength

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4
Q

What does a stem cross-section look like and why?

A
  • stems need to resist bending
  • the xylem forms a sort of ‘scaffolding’, the phloem is always around the out side of the stem
  • they are together to make a vascular bundle
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5
Q

What does a leaf cross-section look like and why?

A
  • xylem and phloem together to make up a network of veins (vascular bundle)
  • these are needed to support the leaveser
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6
Q

How do root hairs take in water?

A
  • by osmosis
  • cells on roots grow in long ‘hairs’ which stick out into the soil
  • each branch of room is covered in millions of microscopic hairs
  • giving the plant a big surface area to absorb water from soil
  • usually a higher concentration of water in soil than plant, so water is drawn into root hair cells by osmosis
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7
Q

What is transpiration?

A
  • caused by evaporation and diffusion of water vapour from inside leaves
  • creating a shortage of water in leaf, so more water is drawn up from the rest of the plant through the xylem vessels
  • meaning more water is drawn up from the roots
  • so there is a constant transpiration stream of water through the plant
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8
Q

What are some benefits of the transpiration stream?

A
  • constant stream of water from ground keeps plant cool
  • provides constant supply of water for photosynthesis
  • creates turgor pressure in plant cells, which helps support the plant and stops it wilting
  • minerals needed by plant can be brought from the soil along with the water
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9
Q

What main things increase transpiration rates?

A
  • increase om light intensity
  • increase in temperature
  • increase in air movement
  • decrease in air humidity
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10
Q

How does light intensity affect transpiration rates?

A
  • stomata closes when dark
  • photosynthesis can’t happen in the dark, so stomata don’t need to be open to let C02 in
  • when stomata are closed water can’t escape
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11
Q

How does temperature affect transpiration rates?

A

-warm water particles have more energy to evaporate and diffuse out of the stomata

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12
Q

How does air movement affect transpiration rates?

A
  • wind
  • if leaf is still water vapour just surrounds it and doesn’t move away
  • meaning there is a high concentration of water particles outside the leaf as well as inside it, so diffusion doesn’t happen quickly
  • if windy water is swept away, maintaining a low concentration of water outside the leaf
  • diffusion then happens quickly from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration
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13
Q

How does air humidity affect transpiration rates?

A

-dry air increases transpiration

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14
Q

How are plants adapted to deal with a lack of water?

A
  • waxy cuticle usually covering the upper epidermis of leafs, helps making the upper surface of the leaf waterproof
  • most stomata are on the lower surface of a leaf, where it is darker and cooler, helping to slow down diffusion of water out of the leaf
  • leaves in hot climates have smaller and fewer stomata on the underside and none on the upper epidermis, so less water is lost
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15
Q

How does the opening and closing of the stomata work?

A
  • closes automatically when water from roots start to dry up
  • guard cells have kidney shape which opens and closes the stomata as the guard cells go turgid or flaccid
  • thin outer walls and thin inner walls make this opening and closing function work properly
  • light sensitive, so open through day and close at night, allowing plant to conserve water without losing out on photosynthesis
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16
Q

How is transpiration just a side effect of photosynthesis?

A
  • leaves have to have stomata in them to exchange gases easily
  • as there is more water in a plant than in the air outside, water escapes from the leaves through the stomata