Why is long-distance transport important for vascular plants?
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Solution
Long-distance transport in vascular plants:
Vascular plants: Plants that have vascular tissues, specifically the xylem and phloem for transporting water and integrating food, respectively. Ferns, seed plants, angiosperms, and gymnosperms are a few examples.
Vascular plants need long-distance travel because they link the plant's non-photosynthetic roots to its photosynthetic leaves, enabling the movement of nutrients, water, and solar energy throughout the entire plant.
In vascular plants, long-distance transport happens in the xylem and phloem vascular tissues. It permits food produced in leaves to be distributed to other plant parts for use and storage, such as roots, and water and minerals absorbed by roots to be delivered to distant portions such as leaves.
In the xylem, long-distance movement is really fueled by tension (negative pressure). Pressure in the leaf xylem is decreased by transpiration or the evaporation of water from a leaf. As a result, xylem sap is forced upward from the roots under stress.
The phloem is responsible for the long-distance transport of sugar from the leaves to all other parts of the plant.