Plant Excretion
Plant Excretion
Plant Excretion
PLANT EXCRETION
PLANT
Plants do not really produce any solid, organic
wastes
The main waste product of photosynthesic
plants in the light is oxygen gas, which
escapes mainly through leaf stomata (tiny
pores in the leaf surface)
PLANT
Water is not really a waste
EVAPORATION
Evaporation of water into the air means that
ADAPTATIONS OF PLANTS
Plants may be adapted to the availability of
water
1) Upper epidermis a complete covering
which is usually one cell thick. It is transparent
to allow the free passage of light and has the
major function of preventing the entry of
disease-causing organisms such as bacteria
and fungi
ADAPTATIONS OF PLANTS
2) Palisade mesophyll tall thin cells arranged in
columns and separated by very narrow air
spaces. Cell contains many chloroplasts and the
dense packing of these cells allows the
absorption of the maximum amount of light
energy
3) Vein the transport system in and out of the
leaf. The xylem vessels deliver water and
minerals salts and the phleom sieve tubes carry
away the organic products of photosynthesis
ADAPTATIONS OF PLANTS
4) Spongy mesophyll
these cells are rather loosely packed and are
covered with a thin layer of water. The air
spaces between them aid the diffusion of
gases through the leaf. The air spaces are
saturated with water vapour so water diffuses
out of the leaf
ADAPTATION OF PLANTS
5) Stomata
These minute pores are mainly present in the
lower epidermis. This surface is less exposed to
the suns radiation so that evaporation of water is
kept to a minimum. The stomata can be closed
when no carbon dioxide intake is needed (in the
dark, for example)
When a plant is short of water, the guard cells
become flaccid, closing the stomata
When a plant has plenty of water, the guard cells
become turgid. The cell wall on the inner surface
is very thick, so it cannot stretch as much as the
outer surface. So as the guard cells swell up, they
curve away from each other, opening the stoma
TRANSPIRATION
Water uptake occurs by osmosis from the soil
TRANSPIRATION
Water diffuses through stomata down
LEAF STRUCTURE
Leaf structure may reduce transpiration:
1. Thick, waxy cuticle reduces evaporation
from epidermis
2. Stomata may be sunk into pits which
trap a pocket of humid air
3. Leaves may be rolled with the stomata
on the inner surface close to a trapped
layer of humid air
4. Leaves may be needle shaped to reduce
their surface area
EXTERNAL FACTORS
External factors may affect the rate
of transpiration :
1) Wind moves humid air away from
the leaf surface and increases
transpiration
2) High temperatures increase the
water-holding capacity of the air and
increase transpiration
EXTERNAL FACTORS
3) Low humidity increases the
water potential gradient between
leaf and atmosphere and
increases transpiration
4) High light intensity causes
stomata to open ( to allow
photosynthesis) which allows
transpiration to occur
EXTERNAL FACTORS
4) High light intensity causes
stomata to open ( to allow
photosynthesis) which allows
transpiration to occur
5) Soil water If water becomes
increasingly unavailable then less
is taken in and transpiration is
reduced
INTERNAL FACTORS
Transpiration increases as the
INTERNAL FACTORS
Mineral elements area absorbed
TRANSPIRATION
Transpiration means the
SUMMARY
Water is absorbed into the root hairs by
osmosis
Water travels through the plant in xylem
vessels
The flow of water through the plant is called
the transpiration stream
Water evaporates from the leaves causing
more water to be pulled up the stem
Minerals salts are absorbed by diffusion or
active transport in both animals and plants