Root pressure is caused by:
1. active distribution of mineral nutrient ions into the root xylem.
2. passive distribution of mineral nutrient ions into the root xylem.
3. a lower water potential in soil than the root cells.
4. transpirational pull.

Subtopic:  Long Distance Transport of Water |
 64%
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Mass flow of liquid water from roots to the leaves is primarily driven by:
1. Root pressure
2. Capillary action
3. Water potential differences
4. Active transport

Subtopic:  Long Distance Transport of Water |
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Identify the incorrect statement regarding cohesion-tension theory that explains the process of water flow upwards through the xylem of the plants:

1. Transpiration in leaves creates tension (differential pressure) in the cell walls of mesophyll cells.

2. Because of this tension, water is being pulled up from the roots into the leaves.

3. The pull is helped by cohesion (the stickiness between water molecules and the hydrophilic cell walls of plants) and adhesion (the pull between individual water molecules, due to hydrogen bonds).

4. This mechanism of water flow works because of water potential (water flows from high to low potential), and the rules of simple diffusion.

Subtopic:  Transpiration & Guttation |
 68%
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Consider the following events occurring during mass flow [pressure flow] of phloem sap at the source. The initial events are given in correct chronological sequence. But some of the statements carry mistakes regarding the principles of the process. Identify them:
I. The sucrose is passively transported to the companion cells of the smallest veins in the leaves.
II. The sucrose is actively transported from the companion cells to the sieve tube elements.
III. Water moves by osmosis from the nearby xylem in the same leaf vein.
IV. Hydrostatic pressure moves the sucrose and other substances through the sieve tube cells, towards a sink.
1. I and II only
2. III and IV only
3. I, II and III only
4. I, II, III and IV

Subtopic:  Pathways of transport |
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In classic experiments on the translocation of organic solutes performed by the Italian anatomist Marcello Malpighi in 1686, the bark of a tree was removed in a ring around the trunk. This experiment, called girdling, was also done by T. G. Mason and E. J. Maskell in 1928. The following were the observations:
I. It has no immediate effect on transpiration.
II. Sugars accumulate above the girdle—that is, on the side toward the leaves—and are depleted below the treated region.
What conclusion/s can be drawn from the above observations?
A: Water moves in the xylem, interior to the bark.
B: Sugar is transported in the bark of the tree and that the sieve elements are the cellular channels of sugar transport.

1. Only A 2. Only B
3. Both A and B 4. Neither A nor B
Subtopic:  Phloem Translocation |
 55%
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Trace the correct path of water from the soil through the plant to the atmosphere:

1. endodermis- cortex - epidermis - vessel elements - intercellular spaces in mesophyll - stomata.
2. epidermis - cortex - Casparian strip - endodermis - sieve cells - intercellular spaces in the mesophyll - stomata.
3. Casparian strip - root hairs - epidermis - cortex - xylem - endodermis - intercellular spaces in mesophyll - stomata.
4. root hairs - cortex - endodermis - vessel elements - intercellular spaces in mesophyll - stomata.
Subtopic:  Long Distance Transport of Water |
 68%
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Closure of stomata occurs as the guard cells:
1. lose water.
2. begin photosynthesis reducing internal CO2 concentration.
3. pick up chloride ions.
4. gain potassium ions.

Subtopic:  Stomata |
 66%
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Guttation is:
1. deposition of dew drops on the leaves in the morning.
2. shrinking of protoplast away from the cell wall.
3. evidence of root pressure.
4. cavitation in the water column.

Subtopic:  Transpiration & Guttation |
 53%
From NCERT
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A column of water in the xylem even in a tall tree normally does not sink because of its weight due to:

1. the exceptionally large diameter of vessels.
2. bubbles too large to be transported even through the pits.
3. the presence of strong ion concentrations near the top of the tree.
4. the tensile strength of a column of water.
Subtopic:  Transpiration & Guttation |
 83%
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The apoplast pathway in plants includes all the following except:
1. the lumen of a xylem vessel
2. the lumen of a sieve tube
3. the lumen of tracheids
4. the cell wall of a root hair

Subtopic:  Pathways of transport |
 58%
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