Translocation Flashcards
(10 cards)
Describe the function of phloem tissue.
Transports organic substances eg. sucrose in plants.
Suggest how phloem tissue is adapted for its function.
- Sieve tube elements
- No nucleus / few organelles → maximise space for / easier flow of organic substances
- End walls between cells perforated (sieve plate) -> allows for a continuous flow of the sugar solution. - Companion cells
- Many mitochondria → high rate of respiration to make ATP for active transport of solutes
What is the phloem tissue made up of?
Companion cells
Sieve tube elements
What is translocation?
Movement of solutes such as sucrose from source cells to sink cells by mass flow.
Explain the mass flow hypothesis for translocation in plants.
- At source, sucrose is actively transported into phloem sieve tubes / cells
- By companion cells
- This lowers water potential in sieve tubes so water enters (from xylem) by osmosis
- This increases hydrostatic pressure in sieve tubes (at source) / creates a hydrostatic pressure gradient
- So mass flow occurs - movement from source to sink
- At sink, sucrose is removed by active transport to be used by respiring cells or stored in storage organs
Describe the use of tracer experiments to investigate transport in plants.
- Leaf supplied with a radioactive tracer eg. CO2 containing radioactive isotope
14C - Radioactive carbon incorporated into organic substances during photosynthesis
- These move around plant by translocation
- Movement tracked using autoradiography or a Geiger counter.
Describe the use of ringing experiments to investigate transport in plants.
- Remove / kill phloem eg. remove a ring of bark
- Bulge forms on source side of ring
- Fluid from bulge has higher conc. of sugars than below - shows sugar is transported in phloem
- Tissues below ring die as cannot get organic substances
Suggest some points to consider when interpreting evidence from tracer & ringing experiments and evaluating evidence for / against the mass flow hypothesis.
● Is there evidence to suggest the phloem (as opposed to the xylem) is involved ?
● Is there evidence to suggest respiration / active transport is involved?
● Is there evidence to show movement is from source to sink? What are these in the experiment?
● Is there evidence to suggest movement is from high to low hydrostatic pressure?
● Could movement be due to another factor eg. gravity?
What do cells need to respire?
Sugar
What is one of the key functions of the leaves?
Photosynthesis.