Utilisateur
Metabolism demands - All cells of a plant carry out respiration so require glucose and oxygen by photosynthesis
Size - Diffusion is not sufficient to meet the demands
Surface area to volume ratio - Cannot rely on diffusion alone
Xylem and phloem
Root
stem - Arranged in vascular bundles- phloem (top/outside), cambium (middle), xylem (bottem/inside)
leaf
Nonliving tissue
Transport water and mineral ions from roots to the leaves
Strong wall supports the plant
made up of columns Stacked end to end - walls are thickened with lignin
Long hollow tube remains after thickening kills cells
Transport organic solute from source to sink
Made up of cell stacked and to end
Alive
Each individual cell is a sieve tube element
end walls are sieve plates
Companion cells maintain cell functions
Plasmodesmata
Maintains the turgidity
Is a transport medium
- Large surface area for water absorption
- Thin wall for short diffusion distance
- High concentration of solutes in the cytoplasm for low water potential in the cell to maximise the rate of osmosis
follow 3 pathways - symplast, apoplast, vacuolar
Xylem transports water up the plants and away from the root - Maintains water potential gradient
cytoplasm
cell walls
vacuoles
Waxy layer of waterproof material on cell walls of endoderm cells
Forces water from apoplast Pathway into symplast pathway
Solutes are actively transported into the xylem which lowers water potential increases volume of water absorbed by osmosis
Diffusion of water vapour through the stomata and out of the leaf into the atmosphere
1. water enters root hair cell by osmosis because of high solid concentration inside
2. Water moves across cortex by osmosis through one of three pathways
3. Water reaches Casperian strip (made of suberin) So it enters the symplast
4. Solutes actively transported into xylem so water follows (root pressure). Water is pulled up the xylem in transpiration stream, using cohesion and adhesion
5. water leaves xylem at the leaves to replace the water vapour that diffuses out of the open stomata by transpiration
Light - More photosynthesis, requires more water and CO2, more stomata open, increased transpiration
Humidity - Decrease transpiration, Concentration is lower so slower diffusion
wind speed - Increased transpiration, Increased concentration gradient because of removal of water vapour
Number of open stomata - Increase transpiration, more diffusion
Temperature - kinetic energy increases, Faster transpiration because of increased evaporation
1. Set up underwater (prevent xylem being blocked)
2. Cut the stem at an angle (maximise SA)
3. Use three-way tap or reservoir
4. Use a ruler to measure the movement of the bubble
5. know diameter of glass tube so you can calculate volume
6. Use hairdryer on cold (to stimulate wind), Use warm setting (to stimulate warmer wind)
7. Cover the leaves with Vaseline (adjust leaf SA)