Plant organisation - AQAPlant transport tissues - xylem and phloem
Plant cells, tissues and organs are adapted to their functions. The stem, root and leaves form an organ system that transports substances into, around and out of a plant.
The xylem vesselsNarrow, hollow, dead tubes with lignin, responsible for the transport of water and minerals in plants. transports water and minerals from the roots up the plant stem and into the leaves.
In a mature flowering plant or tree, most of the cells that make up the xylem are specialised cells called vessels.
Vessels
Lose their end walls so the xylem forms a continuous, hollow tube.
Become strengthened by a chemical called ligninCarbohydrate material lining the xylem vessels providing strength and support.. The cells are no longer alive. Lignin gives strength and support to the plant. We call lignified cells wood.
Transport in the xylem is a physical process. It does not require energy.
Phloem
The phloemThe tissue in plants that transports the products of photosynthesis, including sugars and amino acids. moves food substances that the plant has produced by photosynthesis to where they are needed for processes such as:
growing parts of the plant for immediate use
storage organs such as bulbs and tuberA swollen, fleshy underground stem of a plant, such as the potato, bearing buds from which new plant shoots arise.
developing seeds.
Transport in the phloem is therefore both up and down the stem. Transport of substances in the phloem is called translocationThe transport of dissolved material within a plant..
Phloem consists of living cells. The cells that make up the phloem are adapted to their function:
sieve tubeThe conducting cells that, end to end, make up the phloem. - specialised for transport and have no nucleiThe nucleus controls what happens inside the cell. Chromosomes are structures found in the nucleus of most cells. The plural of nucleus is nuclei.. Each sieve tube has a perforated end so its cytoplasmThe living substance inside a cell (not including the nucleus). connects one cell to the next.
companion cellThe cell that lies alongside a sieve tube in the phloem, and provides the sieve tube with energy to tranpsort sugars and amino acids in solution. - transport of substances in the phloem requires energy. One or more companion cells attached to each sieve tube provide this energy. A sieve tube is completely dependent on its companion cell(s).
Comparison of transport in the xylem and phloem
Xylem
Phloem
Type of transport
Physical process
Requires energy
Substances transported
Water and minerals
Products of photosynthesis; includes sugars and amino acids dissolved in water
Direction of transport
Upwards
Upwards and downwards
Type of transport
Xylem
Physical process
Phloem
Requires energy
Substances transported
Xylem
Water and minerals
Phloem
Products of photosynthesis; includes sugars and amino acids dissolved in water