A 100-metre eucalyptus needs to move water from roots to leaves against gravity — with no heart, no muscles, and no energy input at all. Understanding how it manages this is one of biology's most elegant problems.
Content from this lesson that appears directly in HSC Biology exams
Explaining how water moves from roots to leaves against gravity is tested as a 3–5 mark mechanism question in most HSC papers. Must include: transpiration pull at leaves, cohesion of water column, tension transmitted to roots, osmotic uptake at root hair cells — in logical sequence.
Comparing vessel types by structure, contents, and direction of flow. Tested as 3–4 mark comparison in Section II. Must name specific cell types (tracheids, vessel elements, sieve tubes, companion cells) and link each to function.
Explaining phloem transport from source to sink via active loading creating osmotic pressure. Tested as 2–4 mark mechanism question. Must include: active loading at source, osmosis raising turgor pressure, bulk flow to low-pressure sink, unloading.
Explaining how the Casparian strip forces water and ions through the cytoplasm of endodermal cells, allowing selective mineral uptake. Tested as 2–3 mark application question — often linked to plant nutrition or comparing apoplast vs symplast pathways.
Core Content
Every vascular plant has both — running in parallel through stems, leaves, and roots
Plants have two separate vascular tissues that transport different substances in different directions. They run alongside each other in vascular bundles throughout the plant — but they work on completely different principles and carry completely different cargo.
┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ VASCULAR BUNDLE │ │ │ │ XYLEM PHLOEM │ │ (adaxial / inner) (abaxial / outer) │ │ │ │ [ ] [ ] [ ] ( ) ( ) ( ) │ │ dead hollow cells living sieve tubes │ │ thick lignin walls + companion cells │ │ │ │ ↑ moves water + minerals │ │ upward (unidirectional) │ │ ↕ moves sugars │ │ (bidirectional) │ └─────────────────────────────────────────┘
Every step driven by a water potential gradient; no energy required after root uptake
Water moves from soil to atmosphere following a continuous water potential gradient — from high potential (wet soil) to low potential (dry air). Each step is passive diffusion or osmosis; no ATP is required. The driving force comes entirely from evaporation at the leaf surface.
Root hair cells have an extremely low water potential (high solute concentration from active mineral uptake). Soil water has a higher water potential. Water enters root hair cells by osmosis down the water potential gradient. The long thin root hairs massively increase the absorptive surface area — the same SA:V principle from gas exchange, applied to water absorption.
Osmosis · Water potential gradientWater moves through the root cortex toward the central xylem via two routes:
Apoplast pathway: Water moves through cell walls and intercellular spaces — fast, no membranes to cross, but carries whatever is dissolved in wall water including potentially harmful ions.
Symplast pathway: Water moves through cytoplasm and plasmodesmata (cytoplasmic connections between cells) — slower, regulated by membrane proteins.
Apoplast · Symplast · PlasmodesmataThe endodermis is a single layer of cells surrounding the vascular tissue. Its cell walls are impregnated with a waterproof layer of suberin called the Casparian strip. This strip blocks the apoplast pathway — water and ions in the cell walls cannot continue by the apoplast route. They must enter the cytoplasm of endodermal cells (crossing a membrane) before they can reach the xylem.
This mandatory membrane crossing gives the plant control over mineral uptake — transport proteins in the endodermal cell membranes can select which ions enter the vascular tissue and which are excluded. Without the Casparian strip, any ion in the soil solution could freely reach the xylem.
Casparian strip · Suberin · Selective mineral uptakeWater enters the xylem vessels in the root and must travel upward — in tall trees, this means against gravity for up to 100 metres. The mechanism is cohesion-tension theory (explained fully in Card 3).
In brief: evaporation at leaves creates tension (negative pressure) that is transmitted down the continuous water column by hydrogen bonding between water molecules (cohesion). Root xylem is pulled toward lower potential, drawing in more water from endodermal cells, which osmotically draw more from soil.
Cohesion-tension · Negative pressure · Transpiration pullWater exits xylem in the leaf veins and enters the mesophyll cells by osmosis (leaf cells have lower water potential than xylem water). Water evaporates from the moist cell walls into the air spaces of the leaf — driven by the lower water potential of the leaf air spaces compared to cell water.
From the air spaces, water vapour diffuses through open stomatal pores down the water potential gradient to the outside atmosphere (which has even lower water potential — typically very dry). This evaporative loss is transpiration, covered fully in L17.
Mesophyll → air spaces → stomata → atmosphereNo pump. No energy input at the xylem. Just physics.
Cohesion-tension theory explains water movement up xylem vessels using three interacting properties of water and the physics of negative pressure. It is one of biology's most counterintuitive mechanisms — and one of its most elegant.
| Component | What It Is | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Transpiration (the pull) | Evaporation of water from leaf mesophyll cells and air spaces, then diffusion through stomata to atmosphere | Creates a water deficit at the top of the xylem — water potential at the leaf becomes extremely negative, creating a "pull" on the water column below |
| Cohesion (the chain) | Strong hydrogen bonds between water molecules hold them together — liquid water resists being pulled apart | The water column in xylem acts as a continuous chain — tension applied at the top is transmitted all the way down to the roots without the column breaking |
| Tension (the transmission) | Negative pressure (below atmospheric pressure) in the xylem vessels — water is under tension, like a stretched rubber band | Transmitted downward through the cohesive water column; at root xylem, this tension has a lower water potential than soil water, driving osmotic uptake from soil into xylem |
| Adhesion (the support) | Attraction between water molecules and xylem vessel walls (also hydrogen bonding) | Helps resist gravity by maintaining contact with vessel walls; contributes to capillary action in narrow xylem vessels |
The energy driving this entire process comes from the sun — solar energy evaporates water from leaves, creating the transpiration pull. The plant itself expends no metabolic energy on xylem transport. This is fundamentally different from phloem transport, which requires ATP at every loading step.
From wherever photosynthesis happens to wherever the plant needs sugar
Unlike xylem (unidirectional, passive), phloem transports sugars bidirectionally and requires active energy input. The direction of flow is not fixed — it always moves from source (where sugar is produced or released from storage) to sink (where sugar is consumed or stored). This means phloem can move upward in some parts of the plant and downward in others simultaneously.
Where sugar concentration is high — leaves actively photosynthesising, or storage organs releasing stored starch. High solute concentration → low water potential → water enters by osmosis → high turgor pressure.
Examples: Mature leaves · Germinating seeds releasing starch · Tubers mobilising stored starch
Where sugar is consumed or stored — actively growing regions, developing fruit, roots, meristems. Low solute concentration → high water potential → water leaves by osmosis → low turgor pressure.
Examples: Growing shoot tips · Developing fruit · Roots · Seeds filling with starch
The Mechanism — Step by Step:
Everything you need for the comparison question
The comparison of xylem and phloem structure, function, contents, and transport mechanism is one of the most reliably tested questions in Module 2. Use this card to check your recall — cover columns and test yourself before the assessment.
| Feature | Xylem | Phloem |
|---|---|---|
| Cell types | Tracheids, vessel elements | Sieve tube elements, companion cells |
| Living or dead at maturity? | Dead — death removes contents and end walls, creating hollow tube | Living — sieve tubes alive (no nucleus), companion cells fully alive |
| Cell walls | Thick, lignified — structural support and resistance to tension | Thin, unlignified — flexible under positive turgor pressure |
| Contents transported | Water and dissolved minerals (inorganic ions) | Sugars (sucrose), amino acids, hormones, some minerals |
| Direction of flow | Unidirectional — roots to leaves (upward) | Bidirectional — source to sink (any direction) |
| Driving mechanism | Cohesion-tension (transpiration pull) — passive, no ATP | Pressure-flow hypothesis — requires ATP for active loading |
| Energy requirement | No metabolic energy at xylem — solar energy drives transpiration | ATP required at source for active loading of sucrose |
| Pressure in vessel | Negative (tension — below atmospheric pressure) | Positive (turgor pressure — above atmospheric pressure) |
| End walls between cells? | No (vessel elements) or pits (tracheids) | Sieve plates — perforated end walls |
Activities
A farmer notices that a well-watered tomato plant wilts dramatically on a hot dry day but recovers overnight. Using your knowledge of the water pathway, explain what is happening during wilting and recovery.
A scientist feeds radioactive ¹⁴C-labelled CO₂ to one mature leaf of a tomato plant. She then measures where the ¹⁴C-labelled sucrose appears over 24 hours. The results show labelled sucrose in developing fruit above the leaf, in root tips below the leaf, and in young shoot tips above the leaf — but NOT in other mature leaves at the same level.
"Compare the mechanisms by which xylem and phloem transport their respective cargoes through a plant. In your answer, describe the mechanism for each tissue and explain one key difference between them." (5 marks)
Structure: Xylem mechanism (2 marks) → Phloem mechanism (2 marks) → explicit comparison of one key difference with explanation (1 mark). Use "whereas" / "in contrast" language.
Assessment
Select the best answer — feedback shown immediately
1. Why must xylem vessel elements be dead at maturity?
2. The Casparian strip forces water and ions from the apoplast into the symplast at the endodermis. What is the primary functional significance of this?
3. In the pressure-flow hypothesis, what creates the high turgor pressure at the source end of the phloem?
4. A scientist applies a metabolic inhibitor (blocks ATP production) to the phloem loading cells of a leaf. Which of the following correctly predicts the effect on transport?
5. Which of the following correctly distinguishes xylem transport from phloem transport?
6. Explain how water moves from soil to xylem vessels in the root. In your answer, refer to osmosis, the Casparian strip, and why this pathway allows selective mineral uptake. 4 MARKS
7. Explain cohesion-tension theory. In your answer, identify the driving force at the leaf, explain how this force is transmitted through the plant, and state what drives water uptake from the soil at the root. 4 MARKS
8. Explain why phloem transport can occur in both directions simultaneously, while xylem transport is always unidirectional. 3 MARKS
1. B — Death of xylem vessel elements removes all cytoplasmic contents and dissolves the end walls between cells, creating a continuous hollow tube with minimal resistance to water flow. Living cytoplasm would obstruct the lumen and impose osmotic resistance — water crossing from one living cell to the next through membranes would be far slower than bulk flow through a hollow tube.
2. C — The Casparian strip's function is selectivity. By blocking the apoplast (cell wall) pathway, it forces everything to cross the plasma membrane of endodermal cells. The membrane contains specific ion transport proteins — ions without matching transporters cannot pass. This is how plants exclude harmful ions from their vascular tissue and regulate mineral nutrition.
3. D — Turgor pressure at the source is created by the sequence: active sucrose loading → high solute concentration in sieve tubes → low water potential → osmotic water entry → raised turgor. The ATP is used for the sucrose pump; water entry is passive (osmosis). Transpiration creates negative pressure in xylem, not positive pressure in phloem.
4. A — Phloem loading is the ATP-requiring step. Without it, sucrose cannot be concentrated in source sieve tubes, no osmotic water entry occurs, no turgor pressure builds, and no pressure gradient exists to drive bulk flow. Xylem transport is entirely passive and independent of cellular ATP — it would continue normally.
5. C — Xylem operates under negative pressure (tension) maintained by cohesion — the xylem vessel walls must be lignified to resist the inward force of negative pressure. Phloem operates under positive turgor pressure generated by active sucrose loading. These are opposite pressure regimes requiring opposite structural adaptations.
Water enters root hair cells by osmosis — the solute concentration of root hair cell cytoplasm is higher than soil solution (partly due to active uptake of mineral ions), giving the cell a lower water potential than soil water. Water moves from high water potential (soil) to low water potential (root hair cell) across the semi-permeable plasma membrane.
From root hair cells, water moves through the root cortex toward the central xylem via two pathways: the apoplast (through cell walls, no membranes crossed) and the symplast (through cytoplasm via plasmodesmata). At the endodermis — the innermost layer of cortex cells surrounding the vascular tissue — the Casparian strip, a band of waterproof suberin in the cell walls, blocks the apoplast pathway. All water and dissolved minerals must cross the plasma membrane of endodermal cells to proceed further.
This membrane crossing allows selective mineral uptake because specific ion transport proteins in the endodermal cell membrane determine which mineral ions can pass into the cell and onwards to the xylem. Ions without matching transporters are excluded. This gives the plant fine control over its mineral nutrition and protects the vascular tissue from potentially toxic soil ions.
The driving force at the leaf is transpiration — water evaporates from the surfaces of mesophyll cells and diffuses through open stomata to the atmosphere (which has very low water potential, especially in dry, warm conditions). This continuous water loss creates a water deficit in leaf mesophyll cells, lowering their water potential below that of the water in leaf xylem vessels.
Water moves from xylem into mesophyll cells by osmosis, creating tension (negative pressure — pressure below atmospheric) in the xylem. This tension is transmitted through the entire xylem from leaf to root because water molecules are strongly cohesive — held together by hydrogen bonds. The water column acts as a continuous chain; tension applied at the top is transmitted downward without the column breaking (in normal conditions).
At the root, the xylem water potential (under tension) is lower than the water potential of soil water. This drives osmotic uptake of water from soil into root hair cells, and from endodermal cells into root xylem, maintaining a continuous supply of water to replace that lost by transpiration at the top.
Phloem transport can occur simultaneously in both directions because it is driven by pressure gradients from source to sink — and a plant can have multiple sinks in different locations at the same time. For example, a mature leaf may simultaneously supply sucrose to developing fruit above it (upward flow in phloem above the leaf) and to growing root tips below it (downward flow in phloem below the leaf). The pressure-flow mechanism creates independent pressure gradients in different sections of the phloem, allowing different directions of flow in different parts of the plant at the same time.
Xylem transport is always unidirectional (upward, from roots to leaves) because it is driven by transpiration pull — evaporation at the leaf creates tension that is transmitted downward through the cohesive water column. This is always a one-directional driving force: from high water potential in soil to low water potential in dry atmosphere. There is no equivalent upward driving force in xylem — gravity always acts downward, and the plant does not have a mechanism to reverse the transpiration-driven gradient.
Tick when you've finished all activities and checked your answers.