Transport in Plants Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 reasons plants need transport systems?

A

metabolic demands
size
surface area

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2
Q

Why do a plant’s metabolic demands mean it needs a transport system?

A
  • Glucose and O2 made by photosynthesising parts of plant need to be transported to all cells (ie. underground parts that cannot photo.)
  • Waste must be removed
  • Hormones made in one part of plant need to be transported to where they act
  • Mineral ions absorbed by the root need to be transported to all cells for protein synthesis
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3
Q

Why does a plant’s size mean it needs a transport system?

A

large plants (partic. perennials) need an effective transport system to move substances up and down from roots to topmost leaves

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4
Q

Why does a plant’s SA:Vol ratio mean it needs a transport system?

A

while leaves have a large sa:vol ratio for photo., plants as a whole have a small sa:vol ratio so cannot rely on diffustion alone to supply cells

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5
Q

herbaceous

A

type of dicot with soft tissues and short life cycle

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6
Q

dicotyledonous plants

A

produce seeds with 2 cotyledon halves

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7
Q

cotyledons

A

the two sides of dicotyledonous plant seeds that store nutrients for seed germination and form the first leaves

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8
Q

arborescent (woody)

A

type of dicot with hard lignified tissue and long life cycle

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9
Q

vascular system

A

series of transport vessels running through stem, roots, and leaves

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10
Q

why are vascular bundles located in the middle of roots?

A

to withstand tugging strains

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11
Q

what are the layers of the vascular bundle? (outside to inside)

A
epidermis
cortex (containing parenchyma)
endodermis
pericycle
phloem
xylem
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12
Q

what is the function of the pericycle?

A

contains meristem cells so is able to divide and produce new xylem and phloem elements

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13
Q

function of xylem

A
  • transports water and minerals up the stem to the leaves

- supports plant

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14
Q

function of phloem

A

transports sugars and amino acids up and down the plant from leaves (where food is made by photosynthesis) to the cells needed for respiration.

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15
Q

structure of xylem vessel

A

long, hollow column of dead cells (vessel elements) fused end to end
- lignified cell walls

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16
Q

function of parenchyma cells

A

packing tissue;
provides support;
walls permeable to water and dissolved solutes (water travels easily)

17
Q

function of cortex

A

several layers of undifferentiated cells (parenchyma) between endodermis and epidermis. Contains air spaces.

18
Q

in a root, a vascular bundle contains

A

xylem

phloem

19
Q

in a stem, vascular bundle contains

A

xylem
phloem
cambium

20
Q

what is the cambium in a stem?

A

.

21
Q

what are the three different cell types found in xylem tissue?

A
  • xylem parenchyma
  • xylem vessels
  • xylem fibres
22
Q

what happens when lignin is put in place in xylem cell walls?

A
  • causes cell contents to die
  • reinforces xylem vessels so they do not collapse under transpiration pull
  • lignin is impermeable to water
23
Q

what are the three different ways lignin is laid down in the walls of xylem vessels?

A

rings
spirals
solid tubes with small unlignified sections (pits)

24
Q

function of pits (small holes in lignified xylem cell walls)

A

allow water to pass sideways into other cells of the plant or to other xylem vessels if one becomes blocked

25
Q

xylem parenchyma function

A
  • Stores food

- Contains tannin- bitter tasting- protects plant from herbivores

26
Q

xylem parenchyma structure

A
  • Thick-walled

- Packs around xylem vessels to provide support

27
Q

xylem fibres structure

A
  • Long cells with lignified secondary walls

- Do not transport water

28
Q

xylem fibres function

A

Extra mechanical strength

29
Q

sugars are dissolved in water to form

A

sap

30
Q

phloem structure

A
  • living sieve tube elements lined up end to end to form sieve tubes (long, hollow structure)
  • area between elements perforated by sieve plates
  • not lignified
  • no organelles
  • filled with phloem sap
31
Q

purpose of sieve plates in phloem

A

allow the phloem contents to flow through

32
Q

what happens to all the organelles in the phloem cells?

A

as pores appear in the cell walls to form sieve plates, the tonoplast and other organelles break down and the nucleus disappears

33
Q

what are linked to phloem cells? how?

A

companion cells

plasmodesmata (channels through cellulose cell walls linking the cytoplasm of neighbouring cells)

34
Q

function of phloem companion cells

A

‘life support system’

- very metabolically active

35
Q

phloem companion cells structure

A
  • Large nucleus
  • Dense cytoplasm
  • Numerous mitochondria
    - Metabolic processes for both companion and sieve tube. e.g. produce ATP for loading sucrose into sieve tubes (active transport). Very metabolically active cells.
  • Plasmodesmata link sieve tubes and companion cells. (exchange of materials)
36
Q

what other phloem tissues (aside from companion cells) exist and what is their function?

A
  • Sclereids (cells with extremely thick cell walls)
  • Fibres

Both tissues are for support