TOPIC 1: TRANSPORTATION | BIOLOGY FORM 6 NOTES

TOPIC 1: TRANSPORTATION | BIOLOGY FORM 6 NOTES

Topic 1: Transportation

FULL NOTES PDF

1. Introduction: The Biological Necessity

Transportation is the physiological act of relocating materials within an organism. In the biological context, it ensures the delivery of nutrients and removal of metabolic wastes.

The Constraint of Scale

In small unicellular organisms, the Surface Area to Volume (SA:V) ratio is high enough for diffusion to suffice. However, as multicellular organisms grow complex, the distance between the external environment and internal cells increases. Diffusion becomes too slow. Therefore, specialized systems are required to bridge this gap.

Mass Flow Systems

Materials are generally moved by Mass Flow, which is the bulk transport of materials resulting from pressure differences between two points.

  • Plants: Utilize the Vascular system (Xylem for water, Phloem for food).
  • Animals: Utilize the Blood vascular system and Alimentary canal.

2. Biophysical Principles of Transport

Understanding transportation requires mastering the physical laws that govern molecule movement.

Diffusion: Net movement of materials from high to low concentration. Passive and energy-free.

Osmosis: Movement of water molecules through a semi-permeable membrane. It is defined by water potential gradients.

Transportation against a concentration gradient. Requires ATP and is characterized by:

  • High Mitochondrial density.
  • High metabolic rates.
  • Temperature sensitivity.

Significance of the Transport System

1. Nutrient distribution. 2. Excretory waste carriage. 3. Hormone transport. 4. Antibody distribution. 5. Respiratory gas exchange.

3. Water Potential Dynamics ($\Psi$)

In advanced biology, we use the term Water Potential ($\Psi$) to describe water movement.

The Fundamental Equation

$$\Psi = \Psi_s + \Psi_p$$

  • $\Psi_s$ (Solute Potential): Effect of dissolved solutes. Always negative.
  • $\Psi_p$ (Pressure Potential): Hydrostatic pressure exerted by the cell wall. Usually positive.

Plasmolysis and Turgidity

When a cell is in a solution of lower water potential (hypertonic), it loses water. The protoplast shrinks away from the wall—this is Plasmolysis.

  • Incipient Plasmolysis: The point where $\Psi_p = 0$ (Cell is flaccid).
  • Turgid: Full inflation of the protoplast against the cell wall, providing structural support.
Request Math Problem Set on $\Psi$

4. Histology of Xylem Tissue

Xylem is a complex tissue specialized for the upward conduction of water and dissolved minerals (Sap).

The Four Cell Types

  1. Tracheids: Elongated cells with tapering ends. Lignified and dead at maturity. Present in all vascular plants.
  2. Vessel Members: Highly specialized, shorter, and wider than tracheids. They form continuous tubes (Vessels) due to perforated end walls.
  3. Xylem Fibres: Slender, thick-walled cells providing mechanical strength.
  4. Xylem Parenchyma: The only living cells in xylem. Used for lateral transport and storage.

Adaptations for Efficient Flow

  • Dead Cells: Empty lumen reduces resistance to mass flow.
  • Lignification: Prevents vessel collapse under the high tension of the transpiration pull.
  • Pits: Allow lateral movement between vessels.

5. Histology of Phloem Tissue

Phloem is responsible for Translocation.

Cell Type Key Characteristics
Sieve Tubes Living but lack nucleus, ribosomes, and vacuoles. Connected by sieve plates.
Companion Cells Nucleated and highly metabolic. Provide ATP and proteins to Sieve Tubes.
Phloem Parenchyma Food storage and lateral movement.
Phloem Fibres Non-conducting, providing structural support.

6. Movement Across the Root

Water enters via root hairs and travels to the xylem through three distinct pathways:

Movement through non-living parts (cell walls and intercellular spaces). It is fast but blocked at the endodermis by Casparian Strips.

Movement through the living protoplast via Plasmodesmata (cytoplasmic strands).

Osmotic movement from vacuole to vacuole across cell membranes and tonoplasts.

The Casparian Checkpoint

The Casparian strips (Suberin bands) force water into the symplast. This allows the endodermal cells to “monitor” and control the ions entering the xylem, protecting the plant from toxic substances.

7. Transpiration: The “Necessary Evil”

The loss of water vapor from aerial parts of the plant. It creates the Transpiration Pull.

Types of Transpiration

  • Stomatal (90%): Major route via leaf pores.
  • Cuticular: Minimal loss through waxy cuticle.
  • Lenticular: Through small slits in woody stems.

Forces of the Transpiration Stream

1. Cohesion: Water molecules sticking together (Hydrogen bonds).
2. Adhesion: Water sticking to xylem walls.
3. Root Pressure: Osmotic pressure from the roots.

8. Mechanism of Stomatal Action

The opening and closing of stomata is regulated by the turgidity of guard cells, explained by the **$K^+$ Ion Hypothesis**.

The Process in Light:

  1. ATPase stimulation: Light activates ATP-driven proton pumps.
  2. Proton Efflux: $H^+$ ions are pumped out of guard cells.
  3. Potassium Influx: $K^+$ ions enter to maintain electrical neutrality.
  4. $\Psi$ Decrease: High $[K^+]$ lowers the water potential of guard cells.
  5. Osmosis: Water enters; guard cells become turgid and the stoma opens.

9. Transport in Animals

Animals use a circulatory system driven by mass flow to move blood containing gases, nutrients, and hormones.

Open vs. Closed Systems

Open System: Blood baths organs directly in a Haemocoel (Insects). Low pressure.
Closed System: Blood is confined to vessels (Vertebrates). High pressure and efficient.

10. The Mammalian Heart

The heart is a myogenic muscular pump composed of specialized **Cardiac Muscle**.

Cardiac Adaptations

  • Myogenic: Contractile stimulus begins within the muscle (SAN).
  • Fatigue Resistant: Numerous mitochondria and high vascularization.
  • Long Refractory Period: Prevents tetany (cramp).

11. The Cardiac Cycle

One complete heartbeat consisting of contraction (Systole) and relaxation (Diastole).

Phase Action Sound
Atrial Systole Atria contract; blood enters ventricles.
Ventricular Systole Ventricles contract; AV valves shut. LUB
Ventricular Diastole Ventricles relax; Semi-lunar valves shut. DUB

12. Fetal Circulation: Adapting to the Uterus

Since fetal lungs are non-functional, blood is oxygenated at the placenta. Special shunts bypass the lungs:

  • Ductus Venosus: Bypasses the liver.
  • Foramen Ovale: Hole between right and left atria.
  • Ductus Arteriosus: Connection between pulmonary artery and aorta.

Changes at Birth

Inflation of lungs reduces resistance. The Foramen Ovale closes due to pressure changes. Failure to close results in a “hole in the heart” (Blue Baby syndrome).

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