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"What else is the function of a forest, first and foremost, if not a place to do this: to capture and filter water and merge with sunlight, to create intricate being, intricate matter?"
Rick Bass, "The Larch", Orion Magazine, September/October 2012

"The ability of trees to suck water from roots to leaves, sometimes to heights of over a hundred meters, is remarkable given the absence of any mechanical pump" wrote Harvey R. Brown in a review article in Physics in Perspective in 2013. Scientists have discovered quite a lot about this remarkable process, but that makes it no less remarkable. The structure of plant roots, stems, and leaves facilitates the transport of water, nutrients, and photosynthates throughout the plant. The phloem and xylem are the main tissues responsible for this movement. Water potential, evapotranspiration, and stomatal regulation influence how water and nutrients are transported in plants. To understand how these processes work, we must first understand the energetics of water potential.

Water potential

Plants are phenomenal hydraulic engineers. Using only the basic laws of physics and the simple manipulation of potential energy, plants can move water to the top of a 116-meter-tall tree ( [link] a ). Plants can also use hydraulics to generate enough force to split rocks and buckle sidewalks ( [link] b ). Plants achieve this because of water potential.

 Photo (a) shows the brown trunk of a tall sequoia tree in a forest. Photo (b) shows a grey tree trunk growing between a road and a sidewalk. The roots have started to lift up and crack the concrete slabs of the sidewalk.
With heights nearing 116 meters, (a) coast redwoods ( Sequoia sempervirens ) are the tallest trees in the world. Plant roots can easily generate enough force to (b) buckle and break concrete sidewalks, much to the dismay of homeowners and city maintenance departments. (credit a: modification of work by Bernt Rostad; credit b: modification of work by Pedestrians Educating Drivers on Safety, Inc.)

Water potential is a measure of the potential energy in water. Plant physiologists are not interested in the energy in any one particular aqueous system, but are very interested in water movement between two systems. In practical terms, therefore, water potential is the difference in potential energy between a given water sample and pure water (at atmospheric pressure and ambient temperature). Water potential is expressed in units of pressure (pressure is a form of energy) called megapascals (MPa). The potential of pure water is, by convenience of definition, designated a value of zero (even though pure water contains plenty of potential energy, that energy is ignored). Water potential values for the water in a plant root, stem, or leaf are therefore expressed relative to pure H 2 O.

The water potential in plant solutions is influenced by solute concentration, pressure, gravity, and factors called matrix effects. “System” can refer to the water potential of the soil water, root water, stem water, leaf water or the water in the atmosphere: whichever aqueous system is under consideration. As the individual components change, they raise or lower the total water potential of a system. When this happens, water moves to equilibrate, moving from the system or compartment with a higher water potential to the system or compartment with a lower water potential. This brings the difference in water potential between the two systems back to zero. Therefore, for water to move through the plant from the soil to the air (a process called transpiration), the water potential of the soil water>root water>stem water>leaf water>atmosphere water.

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Source:  OpenStax, Principles of biology. OpenStax CNX. Aug 09, 2016 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col11569/1.25
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