Comparing Plant and Animal Transport Systems
- Junessa Masaya
- Apr 15
- 4 min read
Updated: May 20
HSC Biology | Free Study Notes
In this lesson
what vascular tissues are in plants
what blood vessels do in animals
the main similarities between plant and animal transport systems
the main differences between plant and animal transport systems
why both types of system are needed in multicellular organisms
Why transport systems are needed
Large multicellular organisms cannot rely on simple diffusion alone for all transport.
They need systems to move substances such as:
water
mineral ions
sugars
oxygen
carbon dioxide
wastes
Both plants and animals need transport systems because cells throughout the organism must receive useful substances and have wastes removed efficiently.
Vascular tissues in plants
In plants, the main transport tissues are called vascular tissues.
The two main vascular tissues are:
Xylem
Xylem transports:
water
dissolved mineral ions
At this level, xylem mainly moves these substances from the roots to the stems and leaves.
Phloem
Phloem transports:
sugars, mainly sucrose
other dissolved organic substances
Phloem moves the products of photosynthesis from the leaves to other parts of the plant where they are needed or stored.
Why vascular tissues matter
Vascular tissues allow a plant to connect:
roots, where water and minerals enter
leaves, where photosynthesis happens
the rest of the plant, where food is used or stored
Blood vessels in animals
In animals with closed transport systems, the main transport medium is blood, and this travels through blood vessels.
What blood vessels do
Blood vessels carry blood around the body so substances can be transported between:
gas exchange surfaces
digestive organs
body tissues
excretory organs
Main types of blood vessels
At this level, students should know that blood travels through vessels such as:
arteries
veins
capillaries
Why blood vessels matter
Blood vessels allow transport to happen efficiently and under pressure, especially in larger and more active animals.

Similarities between plant and animal transport systems
Plant and animal transport systems share some important features.
Both move substances around the organism
Both systems transport materials from one place to another.
For example:
plants transport water, minerals and sugars
animals transport gases, nutrients and wastes
Both are needed because the organism is multicellular
In both plants and animals:
cells are too far from the environment for simple diffusion alone to be enough
specialised transport pathways are needed
Both support exchange and survival
Both systems help organisms:
maintain internal conditions
supply cells with what they need
remove or redistribute substances
Both link different organs or structures
In plants, transport links:
roots
stems
leaves
In animals, transport links:
lungs or gills
digestive organs
body tissues
excretory organs
Differences between plant and animal transport systems
Transport tissues and medium
Plants
Plants use:
xylem
phloem
These are transport tissues inside roots, stems and leaves.
Animals
Animals use:
blood as the main transport medium
blood vessels to move it around the body
What is transported
Plants transport mainly
water
mineral ions
sugars
Animals transport mainly
oxygen
carbon dioxide
nutrients
wastes
hormones
Driving force of transport
In plants
Transport is driven by processes such as:
transpiration pull in xylem
movement of sugars in phloem
Plants do not have a central pump like a heart.
In animals
Transport is driven by the heart, which pumps blood through vessels.
Role of gas transport
In plants
Plants exchange gases mainly through stomata, and gases move mostly by diffusion. Their transport tissues are not mainly for carrying oxygen.
In animals
Animal blood plays a major role in transporting gases, especially oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Speed and pressure
Plants
Plant transport is generally slower and does not rely on a high-pressure central pump.
Animals
Animal transport, especially in closed systems, is usually faster and occurs under higher pressure.
Comparison table
Feature | Plants | Animals |
Main transport tissues | Xylem and phloem | Blood vessels |
Main transport medium | Water-based fluids in vascular tissues | Blood |
Main substances moved | Water, mineral ions, sugars | Gases, nutrients, wastes, hormones |
Central pump | No | Yes, heart |
Gas transport role | Mainly diffusion at surfaces | Blood transports gases around body |
Why the differences exist
Plants and animals have different lifestyles and needs.
Plants:
are autotrophs
do not move from place to place
absorb water through roots
make sugars in leaves
Animals:
are heterotrophs
often move actively
need rapid transport of oxygen and nutrients
produce wastes that must be removed quickly
So although both groups need transport systems, their systems are built differently to suit their needs.
Worked example
Exam-style question
Compare transport systems in plants and animals.
Worked answer
Both plants and animals have transport systems that move substances around the organism and support survival in multicellular bodies. In plants, transport occurs through vascular tissues called xylem and phloem, which move water, mineral ions and sugars. In animals, blood is transported through blood vessels and carries substances such as oxygen, nutrients and wastes. A major difference is that animals use a heart to pump blood, while plants do not have a central pump.
Why this works
This answer:
includes one similarity and several differences
names the key structures
links structure to function
Common mistakes
Saying xylem and phloem are the same as blood vessels.
Forgetting that plants do not have a heart.
Saying plant transport systems mainly carry oxygen.
Confusing xylem with phloem.
Listing plant and animal structures without actually comparing them.
Quick quiz
What are the two main vascular tissues in plants?
What do blood vessels transport in animals?
Give one similarity between plant and animal transport systems.
Give one difference between xylem and blood vessels.
Why do both plants and animals need transport systems?

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