Leaf Me Alone (I’m Photosynthesizing)
Thirsty, But Make It Botanical
Plants Doing Physics Better Than You
The Great Carbohydrate Commute
Big-Brain Plant Questions
100

This leaf tissue contains the highest density of chloroplasts.

palisade mesophyll

100

The inside of a root cell is negatively charged because this ion is pumped out.

Hydrogen (H⁺)

100

The primary force that pulls water upward through xylem.

transpiration (tension)

100

Transport in phloem moves from this location to this location.

source to sink

100

Blue light causes stomata to do this

open

200

This type of vascular tissue transports water and minerals upward.

xylem

200

These ions enter root cells through channels because they are attracted to the negative interior.

cations (e.g., K⁺)

200

Cohesion in water occurs because of this type of bond

hydrogen bonds

200

This type of cell loads sucrose into sieve tubes using ATP

What is a companion cell

200

This hormone signals drought stress in plants.

ABA

300

Root hairs are extensions of this tissue system

What is the dermal tissue system?

300

This root tissue layer contains the Casparian strip.

endodermis

300

This property of xylem walls helps water adhere and maintain a continuous column

adhesion

300

At the source end, loading sucrose causes this change in pressure.

an increase in pressure

300

ABA causes guard cells to lose these two components

ions and water

400

These two plant structures are considered sinks during early development.

young leaves and growing roots/flowers

400

Nitrate (NO₃⁻) enters root cells through cotransport with this ion.

H⁺ (HYDROGEN)

400

When soil water potential becomes more negative than root water potential, water moves in this direction.

from roots to soil

400

A shaded leaf can shift from being a source to this.

a sink

400

This three-step process describes how plants perceive and respond to signals

reception → transduction → response

500

This term describes environment-induced, non-heritable trait changes in plants.

phenotypic plasticity

500

This mutualistic association dramatically increases phosphorus and nitrogen uptake.

mycorrhizae

500

Explain why xylem transport does not require ATP

Because it relies on physical forces (cohesion, adhesion, tension) driven by evaporation, not biological pumping

500

Describe why phloem transport stops if ATP is lost at the source

Without ATP, sugars cannot be actively loaded, water will not enter, pressure will not rise, and flow cannot occur.

500

Systemin signalling leads to the production of these defensive molecules.

proteinase inhibitors

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