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Transport in Plants
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Review of Diffusion Diffusion: natural tendency for particles to move from areas of high concentration to low concentration (concentration gradient).
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Review of Osmosis Osmosis: the natural tendency of water to flow from area of low water concentration to high water concentration.
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Vascular Tissue Vascular plants have specialized tissue for transporting material from one location to another. TUBES! In animals, material is transported through the ________________ system.
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Vascular Bundles
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Xylem Transports water and dissolved minerals Xylem: – Tracheids and/or Vessel elements: cells which grow end-to-end, but living contents eventually die, leaving non-living cell walls as the ‘tube.’ Gymnosperms: contain only tracheids Angiosperms: contain both tracheids and vessel elements.
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Which is found in gymnosperms? Angiosperms?
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Plants are not like animals... Plants do not have muscles to push substances up against gravity. Plants do not have valves to keep substances from flowing the other way.
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3 Theories of Translocation in Plants Root Pressure Capillary Action Cohesion-tension
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1) Root Pressure Water builds up in xylem of roots either by: – Cells actively pump water into xylem – Cells actively pump ions into xylem, creating a concentration gradient osmosis. Accumulation of water in xylem builds pressure and forces water upward.
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Problems with the Root Pressure Theory – for tall tree to raise water 100m, need difference in pressure in roots and leaves of 1000 kPa. – Pressure gradient has never been demonstrated in real life.
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2) Capillary Action Relies on adhesive properties of water – Adhesion: attraction of water to other polar molecules. The cause of a meniscus clings onto side of capillary. Drawback: can only explain movement of water of 60-90 cm.
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3) Cohesion-tension Also called transpiration pull. Most widely accepted explanation of how water moves up a tall plant. As each water molecule evaporates from stomata (in leaf), another molecule is right behind it. – Pulls up second molecule due to cohesion: attraction of water molecules to each other. – Loss of water from leaf pulls up another water molecule. Limitation: we still do not know how water begins to move up a maple tree in the spring, before the leaves are out (therefore, no transpiration). CAREER EXPLORATION?
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Phloem Translocation: the transportation of food from on region of a plant part to another region. Phloem transports plant food (glucose/sucrose). Why would glucose or sucrose be NEEDED by different tissues of the plant?
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Mass-flow Theory Most broadly accepted theory of phloem transport. Combination of osmosis and pressure dynamics.
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CLASSWORK/HOMEWORK Page 326, #1-8.
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Classwork/Homework (2) Read pages 531-534. SR # 1-7.
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