How do plants circulate water and nutrients throughout their system without a heart?

273 views

As far as I know, plants don’t have any kind of moving parts that help move water and nutrients from their roots to their crowns. So how do they do it? How do plants work against gravity?

It would make more sense to me if plants worked like fungi, spreading throughout the earth until they’re ready to reproduce, but no, upright plants are the whole organism. Is that not, like, super weird?

Plants are so weird. Like, “Hi, I’m a plant. I eat sunlight and communicate using mycorrhizal fungi. I have no muscles, but still break through concrete slabs. I have no heart, but still move water from my roots to my leaves.”

In: 21

8 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

You can think of the stalk of a plant as a bundle of straws that spread out into leaves. When a water molecule evaporates from a leaf it pulls the next water molecule behind it to the surface because there are hydrogen bonds between water molecules.

You are viewing 1 out of 8 answers, click here to view all answers.