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Transport in Plants Cambridge Biology Think about this… • How do animals transport fluids throughout the body? • How do plants transport fluids? • Do plants have blood? • Do plant fluids contain cells? • Do plant fluids transport Oxygen? • Do plants pump their fluids? Plant Transport Systems • Xylem: vessels that carry water and inorganic ions from the roots to the leaves • Phloem: sieve tubes that carry products of photosynthesis from the leaves to the roots (and other parts of the plant) Why Do Plants Need Water? • Helps keep cells turgid – So soft parts (leaves and petals) keep their shape • Important for Photosynthesis • Water is a solvent: substances can be dissolved in water and move in and out of cells The Pathway of Water • Starts in the soil. • Enters root hairs on the plant’s root. • Travels to the center of the root, into the xylem vessels. • Travels through the xylem up to the leaves • Evaporates out of leaves through stomata. – Called Transpiration • This whole thing is the Transpiration Stream! Transpiration Stream Root Hairs Why do plants need root hairs? • To increase the surface area of the root! • This helps the root draw in more water. • Each root hair is part of a single cell. Root hairs get destroyed after a day and get replaced by more root hairs at the tip of the root. How Does Water Enter the Root? • Root hairs grow into the soil, which also contains water. • Water moves into root hairs through osmosis. – BUT WHY? • Osmosis is the net diffusion of water molecules from a region of high water potential to a region of low water potential through a partially permeable membrane. Water Potential • A measure of the osmotic pressure of water to move through a permeable membrane. • Dilute solutions have a higher WP than concentrated ones. • Water always flows “down the concentration gradient.” What does WP mean for Plants? • There are sugars and salts in the cytoplasm of the root hair cell, but NOT in the water in the soil. • Soil water has a higher water potential than the plant cell’s cytoplasm. • So water moves from the soil and into the root hairs! Root Anatomy • Water has to cross the outer cortex of the root and enter the xylem vessels in the middle. • The cortex is made of regular plant cells. • Water can easily move through these cells. Root Cross Section Xylem Vessels • Xylem vessels = long, hollow, dead cells that form a continuous tube. • Small holes called pits are on the sides of the tube. – This is how water from the root hairs gets in! Xylem Vessels So… • We know how the water got into the roots… • But how does the water keep going up the roots and through the stem?? Transpiration • The evaporation of water through the plant stomata and into the air. • Plant cell walls under the leaves are always wet, so they are always transpiring. Stomata Stomata So What? • If water vapor is always transpiring out of the leaves, then where is all that water coming from? • How do you suck water through a straw? Transpiration Stream Don’t forget about the Phloem! Phloem Tubes • Also called sieve tubes. • Run alongside xylem vessels. • Together vascular bundles or veins What is Phloem For? • Transports the products of photosynthesis from the leaves to the roots. – Because P’sis does NOT occur in the roots! • “Products” = glucose (= energy) • Glucose is made in the leaves (during P’sis) but converted into Sucrose to be carried by Phloem Translocation • Translocation = the transport of substances in the phloem tubes • NOT the same thing as transpiration! • Amino acids are also carried in phloem, so they are “translocated” along with sucrose. Contact vs. Systemic Pesticides • Which has a better chance of reaching and killing all the pests on the plant? Why? • If you had to eat an orange from a tree treated with pesticides, which type would you rather it be? Why? Pesticides • Pesticides = chemicals that kill pests – Such as insects + fungi • Contact Pesticides – Must be sprayed directly onto pest • Systemic Pesticides – Absorbed by plant and travel through phloem tubes to all parts of the plant Contact vs. Systemic