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S E C T I O N 14.2 Vascular Systems E X P E C TAT I O N S Understand the basic vascular systems in plants. Describe the differences and similarities between xylem and phloem. Figure 14.14 Vascular tissue makes it possible for water to travel up the 40 m trunk of this tall conifer and for food to travel down to the roots. Vascular plants have specialized tissue for transporting material from one location to another within the plant, as in the tall tree in Figure 14.14. This vascular tissue consists of an internal system of tubes that transport water and dissolved food throughout the plant. Humans and all other mammals also possess a “vascular system,” which consists of tubes that transport water, dissolved food, and oxygen throughout their bodies. In animals, this mixture is pushed around in the blood by a pump called the heart. How can material move throughout a plant with no heart to pump it? Look for the answer in the following sections. vascular bundles Vascular Bundles If you have ever had a “string” of celery stuck in your teeth, you have encountered a vascular bundle. These bundles transport material within the plant. In dicot stems, the bundles form a discontinuous ring of vascular bundles. In monocot stems, the vascular bundles are scattered throughout the stem of the plant in no discernible pattern. These patterns are shown in Figure 14.15. A B REWIND To review transport tissues and vascular bundles, turn to Chapter 9, Section 9.5. Figure 14.15 Locate the vascular bundles in the stem cross-sections of a typical dicot (A) and a typical monocot (B). Plant Characteristics and Functions • MHR 531 The vascular bundles in a stem are continuous, tube-like strands connecting the vascular tissue of the root to the vascular tissue in the leaves. In the root, the vascular tissue forms a central cylinder, or core. In the stem, this cylinder branches out to form several separate bundles. These bundles form a continuous connection through the stem, running up and down between the roots and the leaves. Xylem Transports Water The transportation of water is carried out by specialized tissue called xylem in the vascular bundles. In angiosperms, xylem consists of long, mainly hollow tubes formed by the nonliving cell walls of tracheids or vessel elements (see Figure 14.16.) These structures begin as living cells that grow end-to-end in the immature stem. When the cells mature, their living contents die, leaving the non-living cell walls in place. Fluids pass from one tracheid or vessel element to the next. Translocation and Phloem The term translocation can mean different things. A few authors use this term as a synonym for transportation. Others use it only for the transport of organic molecules. A few reserve it for the transport of food (specifically sugar) from one plant part to another. The greater precision of this third definition allows us to give the transport of food its own dedicated name. This textbook defines translocation as the transportation of food from one region in a plant part to another region. Translocation is carried out within the specialized tissue called phloem. The process of translocation is still poorly understood. Several main points concerning how translocation occurs are summarized here: Sugary tree sap rises in the spring when there are no leaves from which transpiration can occur. So transpiration-tension cannot be responsible for the movement of dissolved food through phloem. Phloem moves food from regions of low concentration to regions of high concentration. Therefore, translocation cannot be explained by simple diffusion, which can only move solutes from regions of high concentration to regions of low concentration. Phloem is made of living cells, which use oxygen while they are moving food (see Figure 14.17). tracheid vessel element Figure 14.16 Both tracheids (left) and vessel elements (right) conduct water. The xylem of gymnosperms contains only tracheids, while the xylem of angiosperms contains both tracheids and vessel elements. Water (and anything dissolved in it) passes from one tracheid to the next through “pits,” which are thin regions in the adjacent end walls. sieve tube element companion cell sieve plate REWIND To find out more about xylem and phloem, turn back to Chapter 9, Section 9.5. 532 MHR • Plants: Anatomy, Growth, and Functions Figure 14.17 The phloem is made up of a companion cell, sieve-tube element, and sieve plate. Researchers have concluded that translocation is an active process. That is, the living cells of the phloem somehow provide the energy for translocation through their own cellular respiration. Exactly how the phloem moves the dissolved sugars around the plant is not yet understood, and is an ongoing topic of investigation by scientists. Figure 14.18 illustrates how the structure of phloem differs from that of xylem. Note especially that phloem consists of living cells. You may recall from Chapter 1 that glucose is produced by photosynthesis and is immediately converted to starch and stored in tiny grains within the cell’s chloroplasts. You have also learned that starch grains are stored in the cortex cells of the root, and that the phloem transports dissolved food between the leaf and the root. However, starch is insoluble in water, which raises an unavoidable question: what “dissolved food” is being transported by the phloem? The answer: sucrose. PAUSE companion cell sieve plate RECORD Recall from Chapter 1 that the structure of sucrose differs from the structure of glucose, even though both are classified as sugars. Glucose is a single sugar or monosaccharide. Why is sucrose often called a double sugar or disaccharide? Why is starch called a polysaccharide? Glucose, Sucrose, or Starch The food stored in a tree’s roots is starch, but this food cannot be transported through the stem in the form of starch. It must be broken down chemically into sucrose so it can dissolve in water. The sap that floods upward through the phloem of maple trees in spring contains large amounts of sucrose. It also contains small amounts of the organic molecules that give maple syrup its distinctive flavour. Once the maple sap is delivered to the immature buds, the sucrose is further broken down into glucose. The cells in the buds need this glucose to provide the energy they need to divide and grow in order to produce full-grown leaves. The growing leaves then begin to make their own glucose by photosynthesis. xylem vessel cells phloem sieve-tube cells Figure 14.18 The structure of xylem and phloem. Once the leaves are producing more glucose than they require, the excess glucose is converted into starch grains in the chloroplasts. Then the starch is broken down to form sucrose. Dissolved sucrose will travel from the leaves to the root by way of the phloem tissue in the stem. It is converted to starch in the root and stored mainly in the root cortex. Most plants, large or small, handle the translocation of food in the same way as the maple tree, as shown in Figure 14.19 on the next page. That is, the food is transported up and down the stem in the form of dissolved sucrose molecules. PLAY Go to your Electronic Learning Partner to enhance your learning about plant transport systems. BIO FACT What makes honey sweet? Bees make honey from flower nectars that consist mainly of dissolved sucrose. Plant Characteristics and Functions • MHR 533 used by buds and leaves are formed glucose leaves produce starch through photosynthesis starch sucrose sucrose sucrose starch starch early spring late spring summer Figure 14.19 The formation and use of maple sap in a maple tree. PAUSE RECORD Use the information presented on the previous page, along with the diagram shown here in Figure 14.19, to summarize how food is transported through a tree. You may use diagrams, a flow chart, or a written description for your summary. Keep this information in your notebook. SECTION 1. K/U Compare and contrast the function of the phloem and xylem in vascular plants. 2. What are the structural differences between the phloem and xylem? 3. K/U If you analyzed the liquid that is found in the xylem, what would be its largest component? 4. If the xylem or phloem of a plant were damaged, what would happen to the plant? Give explanations for your answer. 5. 534 REVIEW 6. I In an experiment, a researcher interrupted the flow of materials through a tree by placing a metal plate part of the way through the trunk. One day later, a chemical analysis revealed that the sugar concentration in the tree tissue was higher above the plate than below the plate. As well, the concentration of minerals and water was greater below the plate than above the plate. Explain the results. 7. Maple syrup consists mainly of sucrose and water. Could the procedures for making this sweet treat be used with other tree saps, such as oak sap, willow sap, or birch sap? What types of information would you need to test this hypothesis? K/U C MC Would the rate of maple sap retrieved from the trees be greater during the day or during the night? Why? MHR • Plants: Anatomy, Growth, and Functions I