The Vascular System - Effingham County Schools
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Transcript The Vascular System - Effingham County Schools
The Vascular System
What two types of tissues make up the
vascular system in plants?
Xylem and Phloem
What is xylem?
Water and dissolved minerals move up
from the roots to the rest of the plant
through xylem.
What are the two types of cells that make
up xylem?
Tracheid cells and vessel elements.
Tracheid Cells and Vessel Elements
Tracheid Cells:
Long and narrow.
Water flows from cell to cell through
openings in the thick cell walls.
Vessel Elements:
Shorter and wider than tracheids.
Both cells must die before water moves
through them.
How do plants move water through
xylem?
Cohesion-tension theory proposes that the
physical properties of water allow the rise
of water through the plant.
What does this mean?
Cohesion: attraction btw molecules of the
same substance.
Adhesion: attraction btw molecules of
different substances.
For Example.....
Give an example cohesion and an
example of adhesion.
So Back to the Cohesion-Tension
Theory
Simply put..... cohesion and adhesion
create tension that moves water upward in
xylem.
There is one more force that drives the
movement of water in plants.....
transpiration
Plant Sweat
Transpiration is how plants sweat.
Release of vapor through the pores of the
skin or stomata of plant tissue.
What role does evaporation play?
Phloem
Phloem carries sugars from
photosynthesis throughout the plant,
Phloem tissue is alive.
Made of cells called sieve tube elements.
Sieve Tube Elements
Get their name from small holes in the end
walls of their cells.
As they grow these cells lose their nuclei
and ribosomes.
How does food move through
phloem?
The pressure-flow
model explains how
food, or sap, moves
through a plant.
The food moves
from an area of high
pressure to an area
of low pressure