The Need for a Transport System (Edexcel IGCSE Biology): Revision Note

Exam code: 4BI1

Unicellular Organisms

  • To function properly, organisms must exchange substances, like food molecules and waste, with their environment

    • This exchange happens via diffusion, osmosis, and active transport across the cell membrane

  • Unicellular organisms, like amoebas, have large surface areas relative to their volume, meaning the distance from the surface of the cell to the centre is small

    • Consequently, they don't need specialised exchange surfaces or transport systems, as diffusion, osmosis, and active transport through the cell membrane are sufficient for their needs

Diagram of an amoeba showing oxygen diffusing in, carbon dioxide diffusing out, and a label indicating short diffusion distance for respiration.

Unicellular organisms such as amoeba do not require transport systems due to their large surface area to volume ratio

Multicellular Organisms

  • Multicellular organisms, like humans, have bodies composed of many cells

  • These organisms have multiple cell layers, making the distance from the surface to the centre too long for diffusion alone

  • Diffusion to all cells would be too slow to meet the organism's needs, so larger organisms require transport systems

    • In animals, the circulatory system carries essential substances in the blood

      • Eg. oxygen, glucose, carbon dioxide, water and urea

    • In plants, the vascular system transports substances:

      • the xylem moves water and minerals from roots to shoots

      • the phloem distributes sugars and amino acids throughout the plant.

Diagram showing plant and human circulatory systems. Xylem, phloem in plant, and human blood vessels highlighted. Text explains transport functions.

Humans and some plants have specialised transport systems


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