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Plant Cells and Water Students’ Sheet Introduction Cells are basic building blocks from which living organisms are made. You can see them through a microscope. Each plant cell has a cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus, vacuole, mitochondria and chloroplasts. There are different types of cells. From atoms to cells Atoms are the building blocks of all matter. Any one cell is made from about 100 trillion atoms, that’s: 100 000 000 000 000 atoms! Groups of similar plant cells form tissue and work together to do a particular job, for example, root hair tissue (enables water and dissolved minerals to get into a plant) and xylem (tubes that carry water around a plant). 99% of these are atoms of the elements hydrogen, carbon and oxygen. About a half are hydrogen atoms. Groups of different tissues make up an organ, again working together to do a particular job. A leaf and a plant root are examples. 7 400 000 000 people For comparison, the world’s population is about The next stage in ‘building’ a plant is for organs to work together as an organ system to do a necessary job, for example, a reproductive system and a leaf canopy. All living organisms (plants and animals) consist of a number of organ systems. So if each person represented an atom you would need about thirteen and a half thousand times the number of people living on Earth to make one cell! To understand how water gets into and travels through plants you need to know something about cells, tissues and organs in plants. Activities Activity 1: Plant cells The root hairs are tissue consisting of specialised cells called root hair cells. epidermal cell root hair cell Science & Plants for Schools: www.saps.org.uk Plants Cells and Water: p. 1 Questions 1. Look at the diagram of a root hair cell and match these names to the letters: Cell membrane, Cell wall, Cytoplasm, Nucleus, Vacuole. A B C D E 2. Describe the difference between an epidermal cell and a root hair cell. 3. Two other components found in all plant cells are mitochondria and chloroplasts. Describe where these are found in a root hair cell. 4. A plant’s root hair cell is about 0.015 mm in diameter and 1-2 mm in length. How many time bigger is the diameter of a root hair cell than a carbon atom? Size of atoms and cells Diameter of atoms in nanometres (nm): hydrogen = 0.11 nm; carbon = 0.34 nm; oxygen = 0.30 nm [0.1 nm = 0.0000001 mm] Activity 2: Investigating potato sticks 1. Pour about 200 cm 3 of water into each of two screw cap jars. 2. Add 2 teaspoons of salt to one of the jars and stir until the salt has dissolved. 3. Slice a potato into four sticks, each about 5 cm x 1 cm x 1 cm. Try bending them gently and make a note of how flexible they are. 4. Place two sticks into each of the jars and leave overnight, preferably in a fridge or somewhere cold. 5. Remove the potato sticks and describe any changes that happened overnight. Compare their sizes, shapes and flexibility. Observations Make a table to compare the potato sticks (a) before being placed in the jars (b) after being immersed in water overnight (c) after being immersed in salty water overnight. Compare your observations with others in your class and suggest what you think happened. Science & Plants for Schools: www.saps.org.uk Plants Cells and Water: p. 2 Activity 3: Water and cell membranes Cell membranes are partially permeable. This means that some very small particles can pass through, but not larger ones. This includes water molecules. You can investigate this using dialysis tubing (you may know it as Visking tubing). Visking tubing is flat. Soaking it in water softens the tubing, which can then be opened up by gently rubbing it between finger and thumb. ‘Cells’ can be made by tying one end to seal it, pouring in a liquid and sealing the other end (see diagram below). 10 cm length of flat Visking tube soaked in water tube is opened up and one end folded over and tied liquid poured into tube and other end folded over and tied Modelling a cell membrane Work in a group of four to prepare the following set ups: B A C D In beaker: water water sugar solution sugar solution In ‘cell’: water sugar solution water sugar solution Sugar solution is 17 g / 100 cm 3 (0.5 mol dm-3) Observations Make a table similar to the one below to record your group’s observations. Set-up Observations A B C D Science & Plants for Schools: www.saps.org.uk Plants Cells and Water: p. 3 Questions Here are ‘exploded’ diagrams to show the arrangements of particles in water and in a solution of sugar in water. Key water particle sugar particle water sugar in water In reality the particles in both cases are closer together (almost touching). Scientists often use exploded diagrams to make the particles easier to see. In water and in sugar solution, particles move freely and randomly. 1. Using diagrams above try to describe any changes you observed in the four experiments: A, B, C, D. 2. Explain the changes using the concept of particles and diffusion. 3. The type of diffusion you observed is called osmosis. In your own words explain what happens during osmosis. Science & Plants for Schools: www.saps.org.uk Plants Cells and Water: p. 4