Oak trees can generate pressures of 500,000 Pa through evaporation.
“Oak trees can generate pressures of 500,000 Pa through evaporation.” (Lieberman 2004: 893)
Liquids include water, as well as body fluids such as blood, gastric juices, nutrient-laden liquids, and more. To survive, many living systems must move such liquids within themselves or between locations. Because of their properties, liquids tend to disperse unless they are confined in some way. To address this, living systems have strategies to confine fluids for transport, and to overcome barriers such as gravity, friction, and other forces. Some of these same barriers also provide opportunities. Trees and giraffes face the same challenge: how to move fluids (water and blood, respectively) upward against gravity. But their strategies are quite different. The tree moves water using capillary action and evaporation, possibly due to water’s properties of polarity and adhesion. The giraffe’s tight skin provides pressure to assist in blood circulation. and keep blood from pooling in the legs.
For many living systems, modifying pressure provides extra strength. For others, it provides ways to move air. To use pressure effectively requires a reliable source of pressure, as well as mechanisms to create and release the pressure as needed. Often, modifications in pressure within a living system are created by water, although air can also be a source. An example of a water-facilitated pressure system is wilted leaves that use hydrostatic pressure to stiffen. They do so by bringing solutes (such as salts) into their cells, which causes them to draw in water.
Clade Angiosperms (“receptacle seed”): Dandelions, oaks, grasses, cacti, apples
With 416 families containing some 300,000 known species, angiosperms are the most diverse group of plants, and they can be found around the globe in a wide variety of habitats. They are characterized by seeds that grow enclosed in ovaries, which are enclosed in flowers. The floral organs then develop into fruits of myriad kinds and dimensions, from simple seed casings on maples to elaborate fleshy growths like papayas. The oldest flower known from fossils, Montsechia vidalii, appeared during the Jurassic Period 130 million years ago. They are the primary food source for herbivorous animals, which in turn makes them the indirect food source for carnivores as well.
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