- Plants transport water from roots to leaves to replace losses from transpiration
- Water needs to move across the root, up the stem, and across the leaves
Water movement across the root
- There is more than one pathway that water and dissolved minerals can take as they move across the central region of the root, known as the root cortex
- Apoplastic, or apoplast, pathway
- This involves the series of spaces running through the cellulose cell walls of the root cells
- The water does not move by osmosis here as there are no cell membranes to cross
- The movement of water through the apoplast pathway occurs rapidly
- When the water reaches the layer of cells that surrounds the vascular tissue in the centre of the root, it encounters a waterproof layer called the casparian strip which forces the water out of the cell walls and into the interiors of the cells
- This forces the water to pass through the plant cell membranes and so increases the control that the plant has over substances entering its cells
- Symplastic, or symplast, pathway
- This involves the cytoplasm of the cells
- The water moves by osmosis into and out of the cells
- The movement of water in the symplast pathway is slower than the apoplast pathway
- Less water travels by the symplast pathway than by the apoplast pathway
- Water that encounters the casparian strip is forced out of the apoplast pathway and into the symplast pathway
Water can move across the root to the xylem by the apoplast or symplast pathways. Note that the layer of cells surrounding the vascular tissue that contains the casparian strip is labelled here as the endodermis.