Chapter 36: Transport in Vascular Plants
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Transcript Chapter 36: Transport in Vascular Plants
Chapter 36: Transport in Vascular
Plants
Proton
pump- active transport creates H+ gradient used to
pump sugar
H2O moves high Y to low Y if no barrier exists
Y=Ys + Yp
Ys pure H2O= 0; Ys negative value otherwise
YpTurgid=+ ; Ypflaccid=Turgor pressure- membrane against wallhealthy plant cell
Flaccid- cells plasmolyze plant wilts
Short distance transport options
Molecule moves across cell membrane &
wall of one cell to cross into another cell
Molecule moves through symplast
(continuum of cytosol due to
plasmodesmata); molecule crosses only 1
membrane & wall
Molecule moves along cell walls &
extracellular spaces of apoplast
(continuum of cell wall) without entering
cytosol of cells it passes
Long distance transport/Bulk Flow
Movement of fluid driven by pressure
H2O & solutes move through tracheids &
vessels of xylem & through sieve tubes of
phloem
Phloem- loaded sugar increases pressure &
forces sap to the opposite end of the tube
Xylem- transpiration reduces pressure in leaf
xylem creating tension that pulls xylem sap up
Cells performing bulk flow have no
cytoplasm (dead cells)
Short distance transport in roots
H2O & minerals enter root epidermis, cross root cortex,
pass into vascular cylinder, & flow up tracheids & vessels
to shoots
Root hairs & mycorrhizae (roots & fungi symbiosis)
increase surface area for uptake of H2O & minerals
Endodermis
Innermost layer of root cortex cells that surround the vascular
cylinder
Act as last checkpoint for selective passage of materials into
vascular tissue
Materials must pass through a selective membrane to enter
cylinder
H2O & mineral transport: Roots to
shoots
Transpiration
Loss of H2O vapor from leaves & other aerial parts
occur because atmospheric Y is lower than leaf Y;
H2O must be replaced from root H2O or plant wilts
Root pressure
Upward push of xylem sap results when minerals are
pumped into vascular cylinder lowering Y so H2O
flows in; contributes very little to transport of H2O up
to leaves
Guttation (water droplets on leaf) results when more
H2O into xylem than leaf transpires
Transpiration-Cohesion-Tension
Mechanism
Responsible for pulling xylem sap up to leaves
Transpirational pull
Negative pressure at air H2O interface moves further
down into xylem; H2O moves from high to low Y
(xylem to mesophyll)
Cohesion & adhesion
Facilitates long distance transport of xylem sap from
root tips to leaves
Cohesion allows H2O from above to “tug” adjacent
H2O up; relayed down entire xylem
adhesion of H2O to xylem walls resists gravity so H2O
continues up
***Ascent of xylem sap is solar powered
Effects of transpiration
Rate of transpiration increases in sunny, warm, dry,
windy conditions
Regulating stomate opening size minimizes loss of H2O
to prevent loss of turgor pressure & wilting risk
Evaporative cooling results from transpiration (lowers
leaf temp to prevent enzyme denaturization on hot days)
90% of H2O escapes through stomata
Density of stomates is genetic & environmental
High light, low CO2 levels during leaf development increase
stomate density
Turgor pressure controls the opening & closing of guard cells
Turgid guard cells buckle outward- stomata open
Flaccid guard cells become less bowed- stomata close
Changes in turgor pressure result from reversible uptake of
K+
Modifications to reduce transpiration
Xerophytes (arid climate plants)
Small thick leaves
Hairy, reflective leaves
Stomata in depressions to shelter from wind
Shed leaves in dry months
Trap boundary layer of H2O
Thick cuticle
Stomata concentrated on underside of leaf
Limits H2O loss by reducing surface area to leaf
volume
Store H2O in fleshy leaves
CAM plants
CO2 into organic acids at night; convert back to CO2
in daylight
Stomata remain closed during the day
Transport of Organic Nutrients in
the Phloem
Translocation
organic nutrients move from sugar source to
sugar sink through sieve tube members by
positive pressure
Leaves=sugar source
Growing roots, buds, stems, fruits, storage organs
(tubers or bulbs) = sugar sinks
Sinks receive sugar from nearest source
Active transport often required to load sugar into
sieve tubes through proton pumps