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Chapter 36: Resource Acquisition and Transport in Vascular Plants

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central to the integrated functioning of the whole plant
work together to transfer water, minerals, and sugars
the arrangement of leaves on a stem, is specific to each species
affected by the leaf area index, the ratio of total upper leaf surface of a plant divided by the surface area of land on which it grows
Roots and the hyphae of soil fungi that form symbiotic associations
is regulated by selective permeability
Most solutes pass through __________ __________ embedded in the cell membrane
__________ __________ in plant cells create a hydrogen ion gradient that is a form of potential energy that can be harnessed to do work. They contribute to a voltage known as a membrane potential
In the mechanism called __________ a transport protein couples the diffusion of one solute to the active transport of another
responsible for the uptake of the sugar sucrose by plant cells
determines the net uptake or water loss by a cell and is affected by solute concentration and pressure
a measurement that combines the effects of solute concentration and pressure. It determines the direction of movement of water. Water flows from regions of high to low __________ __________
Water potential is abbreviated as Ψ and measured in units of pressure called __________. Ψ = 0 MPa for pure water at sea level and room temperature
proportional to the number of dissolved molecules. Also called osmotic potential
is the physical pressure on a solution
the pressure exerted by the plasma membrane against the cell wall, and the cell wall against the protoplast
increases water potential
decreases water potential
If a __________ cell is placed in an environment with a higher solute concentration, the cell will lose water and undergo __________
If the same flaccid cell is placed in a solution with a lower solute concentration, the cell will gain water and become __________
Turgor loss in plants causes __________, which can be reversed when the plant is watered
transport proteins in the cell membrane that allow the passage of water. The rate of water movement is likely regulated by phosphorylation of these
directly controls the traffic of molecules into and out of the protoplast and is a barrier between two major compartments, the cell wall and the cytosol
The third major compartment in most mature plant cells, it occupies as much as 90% or more of the protoplast's volume
In most plant tissues, the cell wall and cytosol are continuous from cell to cell, this cytoplasmic continuum is called the __________
The cytoplasm of neighboring cells is connected by these channels
the continuum of cell walls and extracellular spaces
Transmembrane route, Symplastic route, and the Apoplastic route
out of one cell, across a cell wall, and into another cell
via the continuum of cytosol
via the cell walls and extracellular spaces
Efficient long distance transport of fluid requires __________ __________, the movement of a fluid driven by pressure. Efficient movement is possible because mature tracheids and vessel elements have no cytoplasm, and sieve-tube elements have few organelles in their cytoplasm
occurs near root tips, where the epidermis is permeable to water and root hairs are located
the innermost layer of cells in the root cortex. It surrounds the vascular cylinder and is the last checkpoint for selective passage of minerals from the cortex into the vascular tissue
blocks apoplastic transfer of minerals from the cortex to the vascular cylinder
the evaporation of water from a plant's surface
Water is replaced by the bulk flow of water and minerals, called __________ __________ from the steles of roots to the stems and leaves
Happens at night, when transpiration is very low, root cells continue pumping mineral ions into the xylem of the vascular cylinder, lowering the water potential Water flows in from the root cortex
the exudation of water droplets on tips or edges of leaves
facilitated by cohesion of water molecules to each other and adhesion of water molecules to cell walls
maintained by the transpiration-cohesion-tension mechanism
generally have broad surface areas and high surface-to-volume ratios. These characteristics increase photosynthesis and increase water loss through stomata
Occur due to changes in turgor pressure
internal clocks regulated on 24-hour cycles
can lower the temperature of a leaf and prevent denaturation of various enzymes involved in photosynthesis and other metabolic processes. Done through transpiration
plants adapted to arid climates. They have leaf modifications that reduce the rate of transpiration. Some plants use a specialized form of photosynthesis called crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) where stomatal gas exchange occurs at night
The products of photosynthesis are transported through phloem by the process of __________
an aqueous solution that is high in sucrose. It travels from a sugar source to a sugar sink
an organ that is a net producer of sugar, such as mature leaves
an organ that is a net consumer or storer of sugar, such as a tuber or bulb. A storage organ can be both a sugar sink in summer and sugar source in winter
modified companion cells that enhance solute movement between the apoplast and symplast
requires active transport in most plants
enable the cells to accumulate sucrose
a living tissue and is responsible for dynamic changes in plant transport processes
can change in permeability in response to turgor pressure, cytoplasmic calcium levels, or cytoplasmic pH
can cause plasmodesmata to dilate
allows for rapid electrical communication between widely separated organs
A communication that helps integrate functions of the whole plant

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