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phloem

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phloem

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The fluid-carrying tissue of most plants is normally arranged in units called vascular bundles. The vascular tissue is of two types: xylem and phloem. The xylem carries water up through the plant; the phloem distributes food made in the leaves to all parts of the plant.

Tissue found in vascular plants. Its main function is to transport sugars and other food materials such as amino acids (see protein) from the leaves, where they are produced, to all other parts of the plant. This could be from the leaves to the roots to provide the chemicals needed for growth. However, it could be from a leaf and up to a developing fruit that is rich in sugars. The sugars are made by photosynthesis, which occurs in green parts of plants, such as leaves (see leaf). The amino acids are made from sugars and minerals, such as nitrate absorbed from the soil. Phloem tissue is usually found close to the other transport tissue in plants, xylem, which transports water and minerals. In non-woody plants phloem and xylem are found in bundles, such as the veins of a leaf.

Phloem is composed of sieve elements and their associated companion cells, together with some sclerenchyma and parenchyma cell types. Sieve elements are long, thin-walled cells joined end to end, forming sieve tubes; large pores in the end walls allow the continuous passage of nutrients. Phloem is usually found in association with xylem, the water-conducting tissue, but unlike the latter it is a living tissue.



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WATER TRANSPORT RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE SOIL, PLANT, AND ATMOSPHERE The long-distance transport of liquids in high plants includes the ground water suction by roots; upward transport of the solution (xylem sap) along the xylem pathways from the roots to leaves; water evaporation by the leaves; downward transport of the assimilates produced by photosynthetic cells (phloem sap) along the phloem pathways from the leaves to the growing organs, flowers, fruit, and roots (Fig.
Researchers in the Sawtooths measuring phloem temperatures, where Dendroctonus eggs over-winter, found that annual minimum phloem temperatures had "increased significantly" between 1980 and 2006.
What is the name for the vessel that transports water from the roots to the leaves in plants - the aorta, the phloem or the xylem?
 
 
 
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