Zusammenfassung der Ressource
B3 - Active transport
- Root hairs are specialised for absorbing water and minerals
- The cells on the surface of plant roots grow into long hairs which stick out into the soil. This
gives the plant a big surface area for absorbing water and mineral ions from the soil. Most
of the water and mineral ions get into a plant are absorbed by the root hair cells.
- Root hairs take in minerals using active transport
- The concentration of minerals is usually higher in the root hair cell than in the
soil around it so normal diffusion doesn't explain how minerals are taken up.
- Active transport allows the plant to absorb minerals from a very dilute solution, against a
concentration gradient. This essential for growth. It needs energy for respiration to make it work.
- This also happens in humans - taking glucose from the gut and from kidney tubules
- Active transport is used in the gut when there is a low
concentration of nutrients in the gut but a high
concentration of nutrients in the blood
- When there's a higher concentration of glucose and amino
acids in the gut they diffuse naturally into the blood
- But sometimes there's a lower concentration of nutrients in the gut than there is in the blood
- This means the concentration gradient is the wrong way.