Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: The movement of organic solutes through plants
Description: includes movement through the Phloem tissues and the mass flow hypothesis, this is from my first year of A level biology

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


The movement of organic solutes through the plant
Scientists and models







Scientific advances begin with a model to explain something
Based on available evidence at that time
Debates stimulate, make predictions (what would happen if model is correct)
Collaboration, ingenuity, think objectively= reliable investigations to test a model
More predictions shown correct= widely accepted
Sometimes it takes just one investigation to show a prediction is incorrect




Cohesion-tension model offers a wide range of scientific explanations= widely accepted
Transport in the phloem is less clear and mass-flow model has many unanswered
questions/incomplete explanation or better explanations out there

The movement of solutes through phloem tissue








Transport of sugars (sucrose) through sieve tubes is easily demonstrated using radioactively
labelled carbon dioxide
...


The mass-flow hypothesis of phloem transport









Method of transport in which pressure differences are used to move a fluid to carry
substances in one direction
Pressure differences generated in different parts of the plant
Sugars made by photosynthesis dissolve in cytoplasm= lowered water potential
So, water enters cell by osmosis= high hydrostatic pressure (source area)
Sugars used up rapidly in respiration/converted to starch (insoluble, forms starch grains
which have no osmotic effect)
Water potential raises- water flows out= low hydrostatic pressure (sink area)
Pressure difference forces sugars into sieve tubes at source, induces mass-flow through
phloem towards sink
Title: The movement of organic solutes through plants
Description: includes movement through the Phloem tissues and the mass flow hypothesis, this is from my first year of A level biology