Biology Year 11 · Module 2

Comparing Transport Systems — Plants and Animals

Xylem and arteries both carry fluid under pressure. Phloem and veins both return fluid toward the "centre." Capillaries and leaf mesophyll spaces both serve as exchange zones. The parallels are striking — but so are the differences. This lesson puts them side by side.

Learning Intentions

  • Compare xylem vessels with arteries — structure, pressure, and mechanism
  • Compare phloem with veins — contents, direction, and driving force
  • Explain how capillaries and leaf gas exchange surfaces share functional design
  • Identify convergent solutions across plant and animal transport systems
  • Explain key differences that reflect fundamentally different biology

Outcome Links

  • Compare transport in plants and animals — IQ3 synthesis
  • Connects all of Module 2 IQ2 (plant) and IQ3 (animal) transport content
  • Draws on: L13–14 (blood/cardiovascular), L16–17 (plant xylem/phloem)
  • Exam-ready synthesis for full-module comparison questions

Success Criteria

  • Construct a table comparing xylem, phloem, arteries, veins, and capillaries across five features
  • Explain two similarities and two differences between xylem and arteries
  • Write a Band 6 extended response comparing plant and animal transport systems
  • Explain why plants can rely on passive transport where animals cannot
  • Identify three convergent functional solutions across plant and animal biology
HSC Exam Relevance

Content from this lesson that appears directly in HSC Biology exams

High Priority
Comparative questions — plant vs animal transport

Cross-kingdom comparison questions appear regularly as 4–6 mark extended responses in Section II. Must compare mechanism, driving force, energy requirements, contents, and directionality — not just describe each system separately. "Compare" means explicitly stating similarities and differences.

High Priority
Xylem vs artery / phloem vs vein — structural comparison

Direct structural parallels and contrasts between plant and animal vessels. Tested as 3–4 mark Section II comparison questions. Students who only describe each structure without explicitly comparing using "whereas/in contrast" language score Band 3–4, not Band 5–6.

Medium Priority
Energy requirements — passive vs active transport mechanisms

Explaining why plant xylem transport requires no metabolic energy while animal circulation requires continuous cardiac output. Tested as 2–3 mark mechanism questions — must explain the underlying physics (transpiration pull vs ventricular contraction) not just state the labels.

Medium Priority
Changes in composition of transport medium — IQ3 synthesis

Comparing how plant (xylem sap, phloem sap) and animal (blood) transport media change composition in transit. Tested as 3–4 mark application questions with data tables or diagrams showing composition at different locations.

Side by Side

01

Xylem vs Artery — Two High-Pressure Delivery Systems

Both carry fluid under pressure away from the "source" — but the pressures have opposite signs

Xylem and arteries are the most tempting comparison in Module 2 — both are rigid-walled vessels carrying fluid under pressure away from a driving source. But the physics is fundamentally different: xylem operates under negative pressure (tension — the water column is being pulled), while arteries operate under positive pressure (the heart pushes). This single difference explains almost every structural difference between them.

🌿 Xylem — Plant Water Highway
❤️ Artery — Animal Blood Delivery
  • Contents: Water + dissolved minerals (inorganic ions)
  • Pressure: Negative (tension — pulled from above by transpiration)
  • Driving force: Transpiration pull — solar energy, no ATP at xylem
  • Direction: Upward only — roots to leaves
  • Wall: Thick, lignified — resists collapse under tension
  • Living cells? Dead — hollow tubes, no cytoplasm
  • Pulsatile flow? No — continuous steady pull
  • Contents: Blood (RBCs, WBCs, platelets, plasma with dissolved substances)
  • Pressure: Positive (120/80 mmHg) — pushed from behind by heart
  • Driving force: Left ventricular contraction — requires continuous ATP
  • Direction: Away from heart — to all body tissues
  • Wall: Thick, muscular and elastic — withstands and smooths positive pressure
  • Living cells? Yes — smooth muscle in wall actively regulates diameter
  • Pulsatile flow? Yes — elastic walls smooth the pulse between beats
The Pressure Sign Explains Everything
Why lignin? Xylem under negative pressure would collapse inward without structural support — lignin provides a rigid scaffold that resists the inward pull of tension. A thin-walled xylem vessel would crumple like a straw sucked too hard.
Why elastic fibres + smooth muscle? Arteries under positive pressure would burst without wall strength. Elastic fibres stretch during systole then recoil during diastole — smoothing pulsatile flow. Smooth muscle adjusts diameter to redirect blood to organs on demand.
Why dead cells? Living cytoplasm would obstruct the water column, impose osmotic resistance, and consume water. Death is essential for unobstructed bulk flow through the hollow lumen. The plant's investment is made once during vessel development.
Why living cells? Arteries must actively regulate blood flow — smooth muscle constricts/dilates in response to hormones and nervous signals, redirecting blood to working muscles, intestines, or skin as needed. This active regulation requires living, responsive cells.
No pulse: Transpiration pull is a steady, continuous force driven by constant evaporation. Flow in xylem has no heartbeat-driven pulse.
Pulse: The heart contracts and relaxes — each beat produces a pressure wave. Artery walls stretch to accommodate the surge then recoil, smoothing flow but creating the measurable pulse.
02

Phloem vs Vein — Return Journeys Under Low Pressure

Both return fluid toward the "centre" at low pressure — the similarities end there

Phloem and veins are both "return" vessels in a loose sense — phloem moves sugars from sources (leaves) toward sinks (roots, growing regions), and veins return blood from tissues back to the heart. Both operate under lower pressure than their respective "outgoing" vessels. But their contents, mechanisms, and directionality are profoundly different.

🌿 Phloem — Sugar Pipeline
🔵 Vein — Blood Return
  • Contents: Sucrose, amino acids, hormones, some minerals in phloem sap
  • Pressure: Positive turgor pressure (osmotically generated at source)
  • Driving force: Active sucrose loading at source → osmotic turgor → bulk flow
  • Direction: Bidirectional — source to sink (any direction in plant)
  • Living cells? Yes — sieve tubes + companion cells, both living
  • Energy required? Yes — ATP for active sucrose loading at source
  • Valves? No — flow direction set by source-sink turgor gradient
  • Contents: Deoxygenated blood (same four components as arteries)
  • Pressure: Low positive pressure (~5–10 mmHg)
  • Driving force: Residual arterial pressure + skeletal muscle compression + breathing
  • Direction: Always toward the heart (unidirectional return)
  • Living cells? Yes — thinner muscle wall, but structurally similar to artery
  • Energy required? Yes — indirect (cardiac cycle maintains system pressure)
  • Valves? Yes — pocket valves prevent backflow at low pressure
The Crucial Contrast
Direction: Phloem is bidirectional — it moves sugar from leaf downward to roots AND upward to shoot tips simultaneously in different parts of the phloem. Direction depends entirely on where the sources and sinks are located, which can change seasonally.
Direction: Veins are always unidirectional — back toward the heart. The direction never changes. Pocket valves physically prevent reversal. Any blood that flows the wrong way is blocked by the valve snapping shut.
Why no valves? Phloem operates under positive turgor pressure that drives bulk flow in one direction at any given point — from high pressure (source) to low pressure (sink). Backflow would require the pressure gradient to reverse, which doesn't happen while loading continues at the source.
Why valves? Veins carry blood at very low pressure, often against gravity. Without valves, blood would flow backward under its own weight. The valves are mechanical one-way gates: open when muscle contractions push blood forward, closed when pressure would reverse.
03

Exchange Zones — The Universal Design Problem

Capillaries, leaf mesophyll spaces, and alveoli all solve the same problem the same way

Regardless of whether we are looking at a plant leaf, a mammalian lung, or a capillary bed in muscle, the zone where actual exchange of materials between the transport system and the cell occurs always shows the same four features. This is a convergent solution to a universal problem — every exchange surface needs to be thin, extensive, moist, and maintain a gradient.

🌿 Leaf Mesophyll Air Spaces
🫁 Alveoli (Lungs)
🩸 Systemic Capillaries
What is exchanged
CO₂ (in from xylem/cytoplasm) and O₂ (out to air) · Water vapour (out) · Sugar loads into phloem here
O₂ (in from alveolar air to blood) · CO₂ (out from blood to air)
O₂, glucose, amino acids (out to tissues) · CO₂, urea, waste (in from tissues)
Surface area strategy
Highly lobed, irregular mesophyll cells with large air spaces between them — enormous internal SA:V ratio
~500 million alveoli providing ~250m² — orders of magnitude greater than outer lung surface
Capillary networks so dense that no cell is more than ~100 μm from a capillary — enormous collective SA
Membrane thickness
Gases diffuse through thin cell walls and thin plasma membrane — minimised at every step
Alveolar epithelium (~0.2 μm) + capillary endothelium — combined ~0.5 μm total
Capillary wall is one endothelial cell thick — ~0.5 μm — minimises diffusion distance to tissue cells
Moisture
Mesophyll cell walls are moist — gases dissolve in the water film before diffusing through membranes
Alveolar lining fluid + surfactant — gases dissolve before crossing the epithelium
Plasma provides aqueous medium — gases, nutrients, and waste dissolved at all times
Gradient maintenance
Stomatal opening/closing + photosynthesis consumption of CO₂ maintains gradients
Ventilation refreshes alveolar air · Blood flow removes loaded O₂ · Both maintain gradient
Blood flow delivers O₂ continuously · Cellular respiration consumes O₂ and produces CO₂ · Gradient maintained both sides
The Universal Fick's Law Principle
Every one of these exchange zones is an independent application of Fick's law: Rate ∝ (SA × concentration gradient) / membrane thickness. Evolution has arrived at the same structural solutions across completely unrelated lineages — large surface area, thin membrane, maintained gradient — because these are the only three levers available to maximise diffusion rate. This is convergent evolution at the molecular-structural level.
04

The Master Comparison — Plants vs Animals

What the two kingdoms share, and where they fundamentally diverge

✓ Similarities — Convergent Solutions

  • Both have specialised vessels that carry transport fluid through the organism
  • Both transport fluid contains dissolved substances (minerals in xylem sap; glucose, ions in blood)
  • Both rely on bulk flow over long distances — diffusion alone is too slow for either
  • Both have exchange zones with large surface area, thin membranes, and maintained gradients
  • Both have transport media that change composition as they move through the organism (IQ3)
  • Both have structural features that prevent backflow where needed (lignin vs valves)
  • Both use two types of vessels for different functions (xylem/phloem; arteries/veins)

✗ Differences — Fundamentally Different Biology

  • Plants: xylem transport is passive — no ATP at the vessel. Animals: circulation requires continuous cardiac output
  • Plants: xylem under negative pressure (tension). Animals: arteries under positive pressure (pushed)
  • Plants: xylem vessels are dead cells — no living contents. Animals: all blood vessels have living walls
  • Plants: phloem is bidirectional (source → sink). Animals: veins are always unidirectional (toward heart)
  • Plants: xylem carries inorganic substances only. Animals: blood carries both organic and inorganic
  • Plants have no heart — multiple passive driving forces. Animals depend on a central pump
  • Plants: open stomata / Casparian strip regulate water and mineral entry. Animals: hormonal/neural regulation of vessel diameter
05

The Complete Five-Vessel Comparison

All five vessel types across all key features — exam-ready reference

This table synthesises the entire module's transport content into one comparison. Cover columns and test yourself — if you can reconstruct this from memory, you are ready for any comparison question the HSC can produce.

Feature Xylem Phloem Artery Vein Capillary
Organism PlantPlant AnimalAnimalAnimal
Contents Water + minerals Sucrose, amino acids, hormones Oxygenated blood* Deoxygenated blood* Blood (both directions across wall)
Direction Up (roots → leaves) Any (source → sink) Away from heart Toward heart Delivers/collects in tissues
Driving force Transpiration pull (cohesion-tension) Turgor pressure gradient (active loading) Left ventricular contraction Residual pressure + muscle compression Arterial pressure gradient
Energy required? No (passive at xylem) Yes (ATP for loading) Yes (cardiac output) Yes (indirect — heart) No (passive diffusion)
Pressure Negative (tension) Positive (turgor) High positive (~120 mmHg) Low positive (~5–10 mmHg) Very low (~25–35 mmHg)
Wall structure Thick, lignified Thin, unlignified Thick, muscular + elastic Thin, less muscle One cell thick (endothelium only)
Living cells? No (dead at maturity) Yes (sieve tubes + companion cells) Yes (smooth muscle wall) Yes (thinner muscle wall) Yes (endothelial cells)
Valves? No No (sieve plates only) No Yes (pocket valves) No
Primary function Deliver water and minerals upward Distribute photosynthate to sinks Deliver O₂ and nutrients to tissues Return deoxygenated blood to heart Exchange O₂, CO₂, nutrients, waste

* Except pulmonary artery (deoxygenated) and pulmonary vein (oxygenated) — arteries and veins are defined by direction, not oxygen content.

Why Can Plants Use Passive Transport While Animals Cannot?
Plants are rooted — they live where their resources are. They can afford to wait for passive forces (evaporation, osmosis) to drive transport because their cells can tolerate slower delivery. They have also evolved to use solar energy (transpiration pull) to power water transport for free.

Animals are mobile, high-metabolism organisms with concentrated organs (brain, heart, muscles) that demand instant, high-volume delivery of O₂ and nutrients. A passive system would be far too slow — brain cells begin dying within 4 minutes of O₂ deprivation. Animals need a pump because their physiology has outpaced what passive forces can deliver.
06

Convergent Evolution — Same Problem, Same Solution

Three structural parallels that evolution arrived at independently in plants and animals

Despite plants and animals diverging from a common ancestor over 1.5 billion years ago, their transport systems share striking structural parallels. These are not homologous — they evolved independently in response to the same physical constraints. This is convergent evolution, and it is powerful evidence that the laws of physics constrain what biological solutions are possible.

🌿 Plant Solution
Xylem vessels — rigid lignified walls resist collapse under tension (negative pressure). Lignin cross-linking creates a scaffold that cannot deform inward regardless of how great the tension becomes.
🩸 Animal Solution
Artery walls — thick collagen and elastic fibre layers resist bursting under positive pressure. Muscle layer actively contracts to maintain wall tone against outward force.
⚡ Convergent Function
Both: Walls prevent vessel deformation under pressure. The sign of pressure differs (negative vs positive), but the physics demand the same response — structural reinforcement to maintain vessel shape and flow.
🌿 Plant Solution
Casparian strip — forces mineral ions through endodermal cell membranes, allowing selective uptake via specific membrane transport proteins. Controls what enters the xylem.
🩸 Animal Solution
Capillary selectivity — substances enter/exit blood at capillaries only through specific mechanisms (diffusion of small molecules, active transport of larger ones, endocytosis for proteins). Controls what leaves the blood.
⚡ Convergent Function
Both: Selective barriers that allow organisms to control what enters or leaves the transport system. Membrane-based selectivity is the universal solution to regulatory control of transport.
🌿 Plant Solution
Large leaf surface area — hundreds of thousands of mesophyll cells with enormous internal SA, maximising CO₂ absorption for photosynthesis and gas exchange surface.
🩸 Animal Solution
Alveoli folding — ~500 million alveoli providing ~250m² from a structure that fits in the thorax. Capillary networks maximise contact between blood and exchange surface.
⚡ Convergent Function
Both: Massive surface area within compact space through repeated folding, branching, or subdivision. Fick's law demands large SA; body-size constraints demand compactness — folding solves both simultaneously.

Copy into your books

Xylem vs Artery Key Contrasts

  • Xylem: dead cells, negative pressure, passive (solar energy). Artery: living cells, positive pressure, active (ATP).
  • Both: thick walls, carry fluid under pressure away from source.
  • Lignin (xylem) resists collapse under tension; elastic fibres (artery) resist burst under positive pressure.

Phloem vs Vein Key Contrasts

  • Phloem: bidirectional, organic contents, positive turgor, no valves.
  • Vein: unidirectional (heart), blood, low positive pressure, pocket valves.
  • Both: operate at lower pressure than the "outgoing" vessel.

Why Passive Transport Works in Plants

  • Plants are sessile — slower delivery tolerable.
  • Solar energy drives transpiration pull for free.
  • Animals: mobile, high-metabolism, brain needs instant O₂ — passive too slow.

Universal Exchange Zone Features

  • Large SA (mesophyll spaces / alveoli / capillary network).
  • Thin membrane (~0.5 μm in all three cases).
  • Moist surface (water film in leaves / lining fluid in alveoli / plasma).
  • Maintained gradient (ventilation + flow / stomata + phloem loading).

Activities

Activity 01

Identify the Vessel — Applied Reasoning

Apply structural knowledge to identify vessels from descriptions.

For each description, identify the vessel type (xylem, phloem, artery, vein, or capillary), justify your identification, and explain one functional consequence of the described feature.

Description A: A vessel whose cells are dead at maturity, whose walls are heavily impregnated with a rigid polymer, and which contains a column of fluid under negative pressure.
Description B: A vessel with a wall only one cell thick, no smooth muscle, and whose primary function is to allow materials to move between the contained fluid and surrounding cells.
Description C: A vessel containing living cells with visible perforated end walls between adjacent cells. Its companion cells are metabolically very active. The fluid inside contains high concentrations of sucrose.
Description D: A vessel with a thinner wall than its paired counterpart, a relatively large lumen, and regular pocket-shaped protrusions of tissue from its inner wall at intervals along its length.
Activity 02

Transport Medium Composition — Plants vs Animals

IQ3 comparison — how does composition change in transit in each kingdom?

Complete the table comparing how the composition of plant and animal transport fluids changes as they move through the organism.

Location / Stage Xylem Sap Phloem Sap Blood (Plasma)
At the "source" / loading point
After passing through metabolically active tissue
One substance that INCREASES in transit
Activity 03

Extended Response — Plant vs Animal Transport Comparison

Full HSC extended response — practise the comparison format required for Band 5–6.

"Compare the transport systems of plants and animals. In your answer, describe the vessels used in each organism, compare the mechanisms that drive fluid movement, and identify one similarity and one difference in how the transport medium changes composition in transit." (6 marks)

Structure: Plant vessels (xylem/phloem) + mechanisms → Animal vessels (arteries/veins/capillaries) + mechanisms → Explicit similarity with example → Explicit difference with explanation. Use "whereas / in contrast / similarly" language. Band 6 = every claim linked to a mechanism.

Assessment

MC

Multiple Choice

Select the best answer — feedback shown immediately

1. Which of the following correctly identifies a structural similarity between xylem vessels and arteries?

A
Both are composed of dead cells with no living cytoplasm at functional maturity.
B
Both have thick, reinforced walls that resist deformation under the pressure of the fluid they carry.
C
Both contain valves to prevent backflow of the transported fluid.
D
Both transport fluid under positive pressure generated by an active pumping mechanism.

2. Phloem can transport sucrose in both upward and downward directions simultaneously. Veins always carry blood only toward the heart. Which of the following best explains this difference?

A
Phloem has no valves while veins have pocket valves — the valves in veins force blood to travel only toward the heart.
B
Phloem sap is less viscous than blood, allowing it to flow more easily in multiple directions.
C
Phloem operates under negative pressure like xylem, allowing fluid to be pulled in either direction, while veins operate under positive pressure only toward the heart.
D
Phloem transport direction is determined by source-sink turgor gradients, which vary throughout the plant depending on where photosynthesis occurs and where growth demands are greatest. Venous return is unidirectional because the heart creates a single pressure gradient driving blood toward the atria.

3. A student states: "Plant xylem transport and animal arterial transport are both powered by active (ATP-requiring) mechanisms." Evaluate this claim.

A
Correct — both xylem and arteries require continuous ATP input to maintain fluid flow against gravity and friction.
B
Partially correct — arteries require active pumping, but xylem transport is fully driven by capillary action, which requires no energy of any kind.
C
Incorrect for xylem — xylem transport is passive, driven by transpiration (solar energy evaporating water from leaves) with no metabolic energy expenditure at the xylem vessel itself. Arterial transport does require ATP via continuous cardiac muscle contraction.
D
Incorrect for both — neither xylem nor arterial transport requires ATP. Both are driven entirely by physical pressure gradients requiring no biological energy input.

4. The alveolus in the mammalian lung and the leaf mesophyll air space in a plant are described as performing "convergent" functional roles. Which of the following best justifies this description?

A
Both are gas exchange zones that independently evolved large surface area, thin membranes, moist surfaces, and maintained concentration gradients — arriving at the same structural solution to the same physical problem via different evolutionary lineages.
B
Both structures evolved from a common ancestor that also had thin-walled gas exchange surfaces, making the similarity homologous rather than convergent.
C
Both structures exchange exactly the same gases (O₂ and CO₂) in exactly the same directions, confirming they perform an identical biological function.
D
Both structures use active transport proteins to move gases across their membranes, requiring ATP and representing the same biochemical mechanism in different organisms.

5. Which of the following most accurately explains why animals require a continuously pumping heart while plants do not?

A
Plants have smaller bodies than animals, so shorter transport distances make a heart unnecessary.
B
Plants have cellulose cell walls that provide structural support, eliminating the need for a pressurised circulatory system.
C
Plants can use solar energy (via transpiration) to passively drive water transport, and their cells tolerate slower delivery rates. Animals have high metabolic demands and organs (notably the brain) that cannot tolerate any interruption to O₂ supply, requiring a continuously active high-pressure pump.
D
Plants transport only water and minerals, which are lighter and easier to move than blood, making passive movement sufficient without a pump.
SA

Short Answer

6. Compare the structure and function of xylem vessels and arteries. Describe two structural differences and explain how each difference reflects the different physical conditions in each vessel. 4 MARKS

Two differences × two marks: structural feature + explanation linking to pressure conditions.

7. Explain why xylem transport requires no metabolic energy expenditure at the vessel itself, while animal blood circulation requires continuous cardiac output. 3 MARKS

8. Identify one structural similarity between leaf mesophyll air spaces (gas exchange in plants) and pulmonary alveoli (gas exchange in animals). Explain how this shared feature increases the rate of gas exchange in both organisms, referring to Fick's law. 3 MARKS

Comprehensive Answers

Multiple Choice

1. B — Both xylem and arteries have thick, structurally reinforced walls that resist vessel deformation under pressure. The specific reinforcement differs (lignin in xylem, elastic fibres + collagen + smooth muscle in arteries) and they resist opposite pressure signs (negative vs positive), but the shared function — preventing the vessel from changing shape under internal fluid pressure — is the structural similarity. Xylem are dead (arteries are not); neither has valves; xylem pressure is negative not positive.

2. D — Phloem direction is not mechanically fixed — it follows the source-to-sink turgor pressure gradient, which changes depending on where sources (photosynthesising leaves) and sinks (growing roots, fruits, meristems) are located. These can be above or below the source leaf simultaneously, driving sap in both directions in different phloem bundles. Venous return is unidirectional because all venous blood must return to the right atrium — the heart creates a single unified pressure gradient pulling blood toward the thorax.

3. C — The claim is incorrect for xylem. Xylem transport is driven by transpiration pull — solar energy (not metabolic ATP) evaporates water from leaves. No ATP is consumed at the xylem vessel. The student may be confusing xylem with phloem loading (which does require ATP) or with root pressure (which requires some metabolic energy at root cells to load minerals into xylem). Arterial blood flow does require continuous ATP via cardiac contraction — this part is correct.

4. A — Convergent evolution means independent evolution of similar structures or functions in unrelated lineages. Alveoli and leaf mesophyll air spaces evolved in completely separate lineages (animals and plants diverged over 1 billion years ago) but both independently arrived at the same structural solution to gas exchange: large surface area, thin membrane, moist surface, maintained gradient. This is textbook convergent evolution driven by the same physical constraint (Fick's law).

5. C — The correct explanation integrates both sides: plants can use free solar energy passively and their cells tolerate slower O₂ delivery; animals cannot because high-metabolism organs (brain, heart muscle, liver) require rapid, uninterrupted O₂ delivery at rates only a pressurised pump can provide. The body size argument (A) fails because some trees are 100m tall — larger than most animals. Cell wall argument (B) is irrelevant to transport pressure. The "lighter contents" argument (D) misunderstands the physics — blood density is not the relevant variable.

Q6 — Model Answer

Difference 1 — Cell viability: Xylem vessel elements are dead at functional maturity — their cytoplasm, nucleus, and organelles have been removed, leaving a hollow tube. Artery walls consist of living smooth muscle cells, elastic fibres, and endothelial cells. Xylem cell death is necessary because living cytoplasm would obstruct the water column and impose osmotic resistance, slowing bulk flow — the hollow lumen is essential for low-resistance transport. Artery smooth muscle must remain living because its active contraction and relaxation (vasoconstriction/vasodilation) regulates blood distribution to organs in response to demand — a function impossible for dead cells.

Difference 2 — Reinforcement material and pressure sign: Xylem walls are impregnated with lignin, a rigid polymer that prevents the vessel from collapsing inward. Artery walls contain elastic fibres, collagen, and smooth muscle that prevent bursting outward and allow elastic recoil. The difference reflects the pressure regime: xylem operates under negative pressure (tension — below atmospheric), so the vessel walls face an inward collapsing force that lignin resists. Arteries operate under high positive pressure (up to ~120 mmHg during systole), so vessel walls face an outward bursting force that elastic fibres and collagen resist. Both solve the same problem — vessel integrity under pressure — but for opposite pressure directions.

Q7 — Model Answer

Xylem transport requires no metabolic energy at the vessel because its driving force — transpiration pull — is powered by solar energy rather than ATP. Solar radiation evaporates water from mesophyll cell surfaces in the leaf, creating a water deficit that lowers water potential at the top of the xylem column. This generates tension (negative pressure) that is transmitted through the continuous cohesive water column from leaf to root, drawing water upward. The energy comes from photons of sunlight, not from the plant's own metabolism — the xylem vessel itself is entirely passive.

Animal blood circulation requires continuous cardiac ATP output because there is no equivalent external energy source available to drive fluid through a closed vessel network against flow resistance. The heart must actively contract against the back-pressure of the systemic circuit to maintain blood pressure and flow. If the heart stops, blood pressure immediately collapses — unlike transpiration, which continues as long as sunlight and water are available. Additionally, blood is a dense, viscous fluid in a high-resistance network, requiring substantial force to maintain adequate flow to all organs, especially at the distances involved in large mammals.

The fundamental difference is energy source: solar energy is captured from outside the organism to power plant xylem transport; metabolic energy must be continuously generated internally to power animal circulation.

Q8 — Model Answer

A shared structural feature is large total surface area achieved through extensive internal subdivision — both leaf mesophyll air spaces and alveoli maximise exchange surface within a compact volume through folding and branching.

In plants, the spongy mesophyll layer contains highly irregular cells with large air spaces between them, creating an enormous internal surface area relative to the leaf's external dimensions. In animals, the lung contains approximately 500 million alveoli — tiny air sacs produced by progressive branching of airways — providing approximately 250m² of total exchange surface area within an organ that fits in the thorax.

According to Fick's law, rate of diffusion is directly proportional to surface area: Rate ∝ (SA × concentration gradient) / membrane thickness. A larger surface area means more molecules can diffuse across the membrane simultaneously. For a given concentration gradient and membrane thickness, doubling the surface area doubles the total diffusion rate. Without this large surface area, neither organism could obtain enough O₂ (or expel enough CO₂) by diffusion alone to meet the metabolic demands of their cells — the small surface area of the outer body surface would be wholly inadequate.

Mark lesson as complete

Tick when you've finished all activities and checked your answers.

← Lesson 17: Transpiration — Factors and Measurement