xylem

xylem tissueCross section of xylem tissue from an oak tree (Quercus species). The large holes are wide vessel members, which serve as major water-conducting cells for the tree.

xylem, plant vascular tissue that conveys water and dissolved minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant and also provides physical support. Xylem tissue consists of a variety of specialized, water-conducting cells known as tracheary elements. Together with phloem (tissue that conducts sugars from the leaves to the rest of the plant), xylem is found in all vascular plants, including the seedless club mosses, ferns, horsetails, as well as all angiosperms (flowering plants) and gymnosperms (plants with seeds unenclosed in an ovary).

The xylem tracheary elements consist of cells known as tracheids and vessel members, both of which are typically narrow, hollow, and elongated. Tracheids are less specialized than the vessel members and are the only type of water-conducting cells in most gymnosperms and seedless vascular plants. Water moving from tracheid to tracheid must pass through a thin modified primary cell wall known as the pit membrane, which serves to prevent the passage of damaging air bubbles. Vessel members are the principal water-conducting cells in angiosperms (though most species also have tracheids) and are characterized by areas that lack both primary and secondary cell walls, known as perforations. Water flows relatively unimpeded from vessel to vessel through these perforations, though fractures and disruptions from air bubbles are also more likely. In addition to the tracheary elements, xylem tissue also features fibre cells for support and parenchyma (thin-walled, unspecialized cells) for the storage of various substances.

Xylem formation begins when the actively dividing cells of growing root and shoot tips (apical meristems) give rise to primary xylem. In woody plants, secondary xylem constitutes the major part of a mature stem or root and is formed as the plant expands in girth and builds a ring of new xylem around the original primary xylem tissues. When this happens, the primary xylem cells die and lose their conducting function, forming a hard skeleton that serves only to support the plant. Thus, in the trunk and older branches of a large tree, only the outer secondary xylem (sapwood) serves in water conduction, while the inner part (heartwood) is composed of dead but structurally strong primary xylem. In temperate or cold climates, the age of a tree may be determined by counting the number of annual xylem rings formed at the base of the trunk (cut in cross section).

Melissa Petruzzello The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica