(transpiration continued). evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by...

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(transpiration continued)

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Page 1: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

(transpiration continued)

Page 2: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

transpiration

Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through the stomata

Page 3: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Water vapor loss

Cell surface:- walls of mesophyll wet- Water evaporates from these wet walls Air space:- Full of water vapor Stomata:- Water vapor diffuses from inside the leaf

through the stomata into the air

Page 4: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Loss of water from leaves reduces water pressure at the top of the xylem

This is how water moves up the xylem Transpiration reduces pressure at the top

of xylem so that there is less pressure at the base.

Water continues to move up. 98% transpiration of water 2% for photosynthesis

Page 5: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Transpiration rate

Temperature: - Faster when the temp. is high than low.- Due to kinetic energy of water molecules- Therefore diffusion happens faster- Increased rate of evaporation from cell walls

to mesophyll cells inside Humidity:- Faster when air is dry than when humid- Due to steeper diffusion gradient for water

vapor between air space inside the leaf and the air when the concentration of water is low

Page 6: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

- Wind speed is fast – rate of transpiration increases

- Due to wind taking away humid air just outside leaf

- Helps maintain diffusion gradient for water vapor from the leaf and into air

Light intensity:- Sunshine = stomata open to let CO2 in- Water vapor also diffuses out when stomata

open- When dark – stomata close (traps water vapor in

leaf). Transpiration slower in dark

Page 7: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Mechanism of water uptake

Water potential = the measure of how much water there is and how easily water molecules can move around compared to other molecules around it.

Lots of water = high water potential Water moves from a high water potential

area to a region of low water potential (water potential gradient)

Page 8: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Water moves up – water potential in air is less than in plant roots (gradient between roots and air)

Less water vapor in air – lower the water potential

Air space in leaf has high water potential (due to presence of water vapor)

This is how water vapor diffuses into the air

This reduces water potential in the air space around mesophyll

Cell wall of mesophyll still has high water potential and therefore water moves from cell wall into air space.

Page 9: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

As water evaporates from cell wall – water potential in cell wall is reduced

This is how water moves from vessels into the cell walls of the mesophyll

Transpiration produces tension which draws water up through xylem vessels (transpiration pull)

Properties of water:Cohesion – water molecules stick to each otherAdhesion- water molecules stick to other surfaces

Page 10: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

Adaptations of the leaf /stem / root

Leaf stem root

pond •Leaves on top so photosynthesis can occur / CO2 from air•Stomata on upper side of leaf

Contains air space so that oxygen can diffuse from the leaves to the roots

Garden* HW

Desert No leaf -Reduced transpiration-Spines – deterrent from animals eating

-Photosynthesis occurs here - Stem cells store water

- Extensive root system to absorb as much water as possible

Page 11: (transpiration continued).  Evaporation of water at the surface of the mesophyll cells followed by the loss of water vapor from plant leaves through

wilting

Plant losses water from leaves (transpiration) faster than it absorbs it form the root

Total water content in plant is less and less

Water in vacuole and cytoplasm decreases

Cell begins to shrink When cells loose some water – flaccid Leaves become soft and floppy - wilting