Biology, asked by archisrivastava9137, 11 months ago

difference between root pressure and transpiration pull

Answers

Answered by himanshuahuja
23
Xylem sap will exude from the cut stem for hours or days due to root pressure. ... Withouttranspiration to carry the ions up the stem, they accumulate in the rootxylem and lower the water potential. Water then diffuses from the soil into the root xylem due to osmosis.
Answered by Anonymous
88

Root pressure is caused by active transport of mineral nutrient ions into the root xylem. Without transpiration to carry the ions up the stem, they accumulate in the root xylem and lower the water potential. Water then diffuses from the soil into the root xylem due to osmosis. Root pressure is caused by this accumulation of water in the xylem pushing on the rigid cells. Root pressure provides a force, which pushes water up the stem, but it is not enough to account for the movement of water to leaves at the top of the tallest trees.


Transpirational pull is the main phenomenon driving the flow of water in the xylem tissues of large plants.Transpirational pull results ultimately from the evaporation of water from the surfaces of cells in the interior of the leaves. This evaporation causes the surface of the water to pull back into the pores of the cell wall. Inside the pores, the water forms a concave meniscus. The high surface tension of water pulls the concavity outwards, generating enough force to lift water as high as a hundred meters from ground level to a tree's highest branches. Transpirational pull only works because the vessels transporting the water are very small in diameter, otherwise cavitation would break the water column


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