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Lesson 8: Transport In Multicellular Organisms Key Points: 1. Understand how transport within cells is similar and involved in transport in a multicellular Organism. 2. Understand how nutrients (water, sugar and minerals) are transported in vascular plants. 3. Learn the structure of vascular plants. 4. Learn what forces are involved in this transport. General Characteristics of Vascular Plants The resources a land plant needs to survive are spatially separated: The soil provides water and minerals, but there is no light underground for photosynthesis. The body of a vascular plant is differentiated into a subterranean root system that absorbs water and minerals and an aerial shoot system of stems and leaves that make food. Adaptations of Vascular Plants An important terrestrial adaptation of vascular plants is lignin, a hard material embedded in the cell walls of plant cells that functions in support. Adaptations of Vascular Plants Turgor Pressure (pressure of water in vacuoles) contributes to the support of small plants but it is the skeleton of lignified walls that holds up a tree or any other large vascular plant. Roots Roots anchor the plant in the soil, absorb minerals and water, conduct water and nutrients, and store food. Stems The main purpose of stems is to support the plant and transport nutrients from the roots to the leaves. The stem must have a great deal of turgor pressure in its cells and sufficient lignin in the cell walls. Leaves Leaves are the main photosynthetic organs of most plants, although green stems also perform photosynthesis. Leaves have veins, which transport nutrients to the cells of the leaf. These can be arranged in a number of ways. Leaves vary extensively in form, but they generally consist of a flattened blade and a stalk, the petiole, which joins the leaf to a node of the stem. Transport in Plants Transport in Plants These Notes refer to the transport in Plants diagram. 1. Roots absorb water and dissolved minerals from the soil. 2. Roots exchange gases with the air spaces of soil taking in O2 and discharging CO2. This gas exchange supports the cellular respiration of root cells. 3. Water and minerals are transported upward as xylem sap within xylem, from the roots into the shoot system. 4. Transpiration, the evaporation of water from leaves (mostly through stomata), creates a force within leaves that pulls xylem sap upward. 5. Leaves also exchange gases through stomata taking in CO2 that provides carbon for photosynthesis and expelling O2. 6. Sugar is produced by photosynthesis in the leaves. 7. Sugar is transported within the phloem in a solution called phloem sap to roots and other non-photosynthetic parts of the plant. Transport in Plants Two tissues are responsible for transporting material in plants. The Phloem and the Xylem. Each transports different material in different ways. Xylem The xylem transports water up the plant. This tissue is located in the center of the stem/trunk. Transport is accomplished by a process involving Osmosis, adhesion and cohesion of water molecules. As water evaporates from the leaves, the remaining solution in the xylem becomes more concentrated, this pulls more water up the stem to help balance the concentration. This same process allows the roots to take up water as well. Phloem The phloem transports the sugars synthesized in photosynthesis down the plant to tissues not capable of photosynthesis (stem and roots). This is accomplished mainly by gravity. The process is slow however because the phloem sap is quite viscous and adheres to the inside of the very small phloem tubes, so some osmosis and diffusion is still required. Questions For Review 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. What processes/properties are used in both intracellular transport and transport in multicellular organisms? How are they used? If you were tapping a maple tree to harvest sap for syrup, which transporting tissue would you tap? Why? Where is it located? In the leaf why are so many cells packed together near the surface of the leaf? How are they continually supplied with water? Would a plant be able to transport water to its leaves more easily for less easily on a humid day? You have a plant that does not look very full (few stringy branches). What would you do to give it a more full appearance (have more short branches full of leaves)?