37
The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

The Transpiration Stream

How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Page 2: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Transpiration

Transpiration – evaporation of water from the leaves.

Transpiration stream – movement of water through the plant.

Page 3: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Root Structure

Zone of cell differentiation

Zone of cell elongation

Zone of cell division

Root cap

Section through a root tip

Page 4: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Root Structure

Page 5: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

5 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

Reminder: What is water potential?

Water also tends to move from areas of high hydrostatic pressure to areas of low hydrostatic pressure. It is also affected by gravity and electrostatic forces, such as those that cause surface tension.

The collective term for the tendency of water to move due to any of these effects is water potential.

Water tends to move from areas of high water concentration to areas of low water concentration. This is osmosis.

Page 6: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

6 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

What is transpiration?

Transpiration is the loss of water from the leaves of a plant. Most of this occurs from the underside of a leaf, where there are many stomata in the epidermis.

Most plants control their water intake by opening and closing their stomata. This happens when water levels change in the guard cells around each stoma. This occurs either passively by osmosis, or by active transport of solutes.

Transpiration rates also vary naturally in response to environmental factors such as temperature and humidity.

Page 7: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Root hair cells

What is the function of the root hairs?

How are the cells adapted to perform their function efficiently?

Page 8: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

How does water move across the root?

Mineral ions are actively transported into the root hair cells.

This decreases the water potential of these cells.

Water is drawn in by osmosis, along the water potential gradient.

Why is the water content of soils important?

Page 9: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

How does water move across the root?

Water moves across the cortex along a water potential gradient.

This occurs via the apoplast and symplast pathways (and the vacuolar pathway).

Page 10: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

10 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

The transpiration stream

Page 11: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

How does water move across the root?

When water reaches the endodermis, there is a problem…

The cell walls of the endodermis contain suberin, a waterproof material that forms the Casparian strip.

Page 12: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

The Casparian StripWhich pathway taken by water is prevented by the Casparian strip?

(apoplast or symplast)

Page 13: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Into the xylem…Using only the symplastic pathway, water moves across the endodermis and into the cells of the stele.

Mineral ions are actively transported into the xylem, decreasing the water potential.

Water enters the xylem by osmosis.

Page 14: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

The properties of water

On pages 72-73 read about the properties of water and think about why these properties might be important to plants.

Use the information to complete your table.

Page 15: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?
Page 16: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

The Xylem

Xylem walls contain a waterproof substance called lignin.

Page 17: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

How does water move up the xylem?

A combination of root pressure and cohesion-tension of the water molecules…

Page 18: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

18 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

What is root pressure?

Water can be transported up the xylem by a positive hydrostatic pressure from below. This is known as root pressure.

Mineral ions are actively transported into the roots of the plant, causing water to enter by osmosis. This increases the hydrostatic pressure in the root, forcing water up the stem.

Page 19: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

19 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

Cohesion–tension theory

Water is a polar molecule, meaning that its positive and negative charges are not evenly distributed. The oxygen atom has a slight negative charge, while the two hydrogen atoms are slightly positive.

This causes the molecules to cohere, or stick together, so that as some leave a plant by transpiration, a tension is created between the molecules, so others are pulled up behind them.

This means that, in the xylem, water molecules spontaneously arrange so that positive and negatively charged poles lie next to each other.

Page 20: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

20 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

A side note…

Water also moves up the xylem due to the adhesive forces between the water molecules and the walls of the xylem.

This is known as capillarity, or capillary action.

The narrower the tube, the greater the effect.

Page 21: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

21 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

In the leaves…

Page 22: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

22 of 26 © Boardworks Ltd 2008

The transpiration stream

Page 23: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?
Page 24: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?
Page 25: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?
Page 26: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Opening/ Closing Stomata• Stomata can be closed to prevent water

loss.• Guard cells curve apart when turgid.• When flaccid, the edges of the cells lie

close together.• However, this drastically slows

transpiration and means that no carbon dioxide can enter the leaf (= no photosynthesis).

Page 27: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Draw a flow chart to explain the different stages in the transpiration stream.

You must include the following words: heat energy, stomata, diffusion, water potential, cohesion, adhesion, xylem vessels.

Extra challenge: Why do stomata close at night?

Page 28: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Factors Affecting Water Loss• Diffusion rate is affected by:

• Surface area (the higher the surface area, the greater the rate of diffusion).

• Difference in concentration (the greater the concentration gradient, the higher the rate of diffusion).

• Length of the diffusion path (the greater the length, the lower the rate of diffusion).

Page 29: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Preventing Excess Water Loss• Cuticle (waxy layer) on leaf which is

impermeable to water.• Most stomata found on underside of leaf

as it is cooler.• Thick leaves = reduced water loss.• Spines/ hairs increasing boundary layer

(undisturbed layer of air).• Stomata closed at certain times of the

day.• Stomata may be sunken and found in

pits.

Page 30: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Study the graph in Fig. 2. It shows how four different factors affect transpiration rate.

a) Which factor appears to have the greatest effect on transpiration rate?b) For each factor, briefly explain why you would expect it to affect transpiration rate as it does.

Page 31: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

a) Which factor appears to have the greatest effect on transpiration rate?

Temperature

Because it:

Increases the rate of evaporation

Increases the rate of diffusion

Page 32: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

b) For each factor, briefly explain why you would expect it to affect transpiration rate as it does

Relative humidity:High RHmore water vapour in the air outside the leaf - reduces the diffusion gradient - reduces transpiration.

Low RH less water vapour – steeper diffusion gradient - increases transpiration

Page 33: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Stomatal opening:

Openmore water vapour can diffuse out – transpiration increase

Closedless water vapour can diffuse out – transpiration decreases

Page 34: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Wind speed:

Wind blows away any water vapour which has diffused out of the leaf – increases the diffusion gradient – so as wind speed increases transpiration increases

Page 35: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

An Experiment – Factors affecting the rate of transpiration

Collect 4 similar leaves. Add vaseline:Leaf A – No vaselineLeaf B – Vaseline on the top surfaceLeaf C – Vaseline on the bottom surfaceLeaf D – Vaseline on the top and bottom surface

Weigh all the leaves then hang them up by the stem.

Bring your practical book next lesson!

Page 36: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Property of water Relevance/importance to plants

Property of water Relevance/importance to plants

Page 37: The Transpiration Stream How does water move into, through and out of a plant?

Model answer

1: Leaf absorbs heat energy from the sun. Water constantly evaporates from the cell walls of the leaf cells.

2: Water vapour diffuses through the air spaces in the leaf and out through the stomata, down the diffusion gradient. This water loss from leaves by evaporation is called transpiration.

3: Water leaving the cells in the leaf lowers the water potential so creates a gradient of water potential that draws water from the xylem in the leaf veins.Water either diffuses from cell to cell via the plasmodesmata or diffuses in the cellulose cell walls. [It can also move from cell to cell by crossing the cell membranes by osmosis]. This water from the xylem replaces the water lost from the cellsDue to the cohesive forces between the water molecules the flow of water from the xylem at the end of the leaf veins to the cells ‘pulls’ water along the veins from the petiole to replace it.

4: This ‘pull’ is transmitted all the way down the xylem so a continuous column of water is pulled up to the leaves from the roots. The column prevented from falling backwards due to gravity by•upward pull•adhesion forces between water and lignin

‘Pull’ plus adhesion to wall puts water columns in xylem under tension so they are stretched

Hence this is called the ‘cohesion-tension’ theory of water transport.

5: Movement of water upwards lowers water content of the xylem in the root so water constantly diffuses into it from the root tissues and ultimately from the soil

Cells surrounding the xylem also use active transport to ‘pump’ mineral ions into the xylem to lower the water potential so water will also enter the xylem by osmosis. The movement of water form the soil to the plant is called the transpiration stream.