Structures and Functions in Living Organisms · 5 question types
Past paper frequency (2018 to 2024)
This topic accounts for approximately 19% of your exam marks.
Transpiration and the roles of xylem and phloem are tested on almost every paper in recent years.
A small single-celled organism such as Amoeba can get everything it needs by diffusion straight across its cell membrane: its surface-area-to-volume ratio is so high that no specialised transport is needed.
A large multicellular plant is the opposite. Its roots are in the soil, picking up water and dissolved mineral ions. Its leaves are in the air, producing sugars by photosynthesis. The two are tens of centimetres or even tens of metres apart, far too far for diffusion alone to move substances at a useful rate. A plant therefore needs a transport system: a network of tubes that moves water, mineral ions and sugars between the parts of the plant that need or supply them.
In a plant this transport system is the vascular system, made of two types of tube running side by side through the roots, stem and leaves: