How Transport Media Change Around the Organism
- Junessa Masaya
- Apr 15
- 5 min read
Updated: May 20
HSC Biology | Free Study Notes
In this lesson
how blood composition changes in animals
how transport changes in plants
how nutrients move around the organism
how gases move around the organism
how wastes are carried and removed
What is a transport medium?
A transport medium is the substance that carries materials from one part of an organism to another.
Examples
In animals, the main transport medium is blood.
In plants, substances move in xylem sap and phloem sap.
Why transport media change
The composition of the transport medium changes because materials are:
added in some parts of the organism
removed in other parts
used by cells
produced as wastes
This means the transport medium does not stay exactly the same all the way around.
Blood composition changes in animals
In animals, blood changes as it passes different exchange surfaces and organs.
Nutrient movement in blood
After digestion, nutrients are absorbed into the blood from the small intestine.
What is added
Blood leaving the small intestine contains increased levels of:
glucose
amino acids
other absorbed nutrients
water and mineral ions
What happens next
These nutrients are then transported to body cells, where they may be:
used in respiration
used for growth and repair
stored
So blood reaching tissues contains nutrients, but blood leaving active tissues may contain lower concentrations because the cells have taken some up.
Gas movement in blood
Blood composition also changes as it passes gas exchange surfaces and body tissues.
At the lungs
In mammals:
oxygen enters the blood
carbon dioxide leaves the blood
So blood leaving the lungs is:
higher in oxygen
lower in carbon dioxide
At body tissues
As blood passes through tissues:
oxygen leaves the blood and diffuses into cells
carbon dioxide enters the blood from respiring cells
So blood leaving tissues is:
lower in oxygen
higher in carbon dioxide
Waste movement in blood
Blood also carries wastes away from cells.
Examples of wastes carried in blood
carbon dioxide
nitrogenous wastes such as urea
excess water in some contexts
How this changes blood composition
As blood passes body tissues:
wastes are added to the blood
As blood passes organs involved in waste removal:
some wastes are removed from the blood
For example:
the lungs remove carbon dioxide
the kidneys remove urea, excess salts and water
So blood leaving excretory organs has a different composition from blood entering them.
Blood does not stay chemically identical
The key idea is that blood is always moving substances:
into tissues
out of tissues
to exchange surfaces
away from exchange surfaces
Because of that, its composition changes continuously around the circulation.
Plant transport changes
Plants do not use blood, but their transport media also change as substances move through the organism.
Xylem transport changes
Xylem transports:
water
dissolved mineral ions
Where substances enter
Water and mineral ions enter through the roots.
So xylem near the roots contains water and minerals absorbed from the soil.
What happens as xylem moves upward
As water moves up through the plant:
some is used by cells
some is lost by transpiration from the leaves
So the amount of water in the xylem changes as it moves through the plant.
Key point
Xylem mainly carries raw materials needed by the leaves, especially water for photosynthesis.
Phloem transport changes
Phloem transports:
sugars, mainly sucrose
other dissolved organic substances
Where substances enter
Sugars are added to the phloem in the leaves, where photosynthesis occurs.
Where substances leave
Sugars are removed from the phloem in places where they are:
used in respiration
used for growth
converted to storage products
These areas may include:
roots
stems
fruits
growing tissues
Key point
This means phloem composition changes as sugars are loaded into it in leaves and unloaded from it in other parts of the plant.
Nutrient movement
In animals
In animals, nutrients:
enter the blood after absorption in the digestive system
are transported to body cells
are removed from the blood as cells take them up
So blood nutrient levels change depending on where the blood is in the body.
In plants
In plants, nutrients move differently:
water and mineral ions move mainly in xylem
sugars produced by photosynthesis move mainly in phloem
So plants use two main transport pathways rather than one main transport medium like blood.
Gas movement
In animals
In animals:
oxygen is added at respiratory surfaces
oxygen is removed by body tissues
carbon dioxide is added by body tissues
carbon dioxide is removed at respiratory surfaces
In plants
Plants mainly exchange gases by diffusion rather than transporting oxygen widely in vascular tissues in the same way animals do with blood.
The main transport changes in plants are more focused on:
water and mineral ions in xylem
sugars in phloem
Waste movement
In animals
In animals, wastes such as carbon dioxide and urea are added to the blood by cells and later removed at organs such as the lungs and kidneys.
In plants
In plants, waste handling is different. For this Module 2 page, the main focus is on:
water loss through transpiration
movement of useful materials through xylem and phloem
Comparing plant and animal transport changes
Feature | Animals | Plants |
Main transport medium | Blood | Xylem sap and phloem sap |
Main nutrient additions | Small intestine | Roots and leaves |
Main gas changes | Lungs and tissues | Mostly gas exchange by diffusion |
Main waste changes | Tissues, lungs, kidneys | Water loss through transpiration, sugar movement and usage |
Why this idea matters
This topic helps students see that transport systems are not just pipes carrying the same fluid everywhere.
Instead, transport media are dynamic. Their composition changes depending on:
where substances enter
where substances are used
where wastes are produced
where wastes are removed
That is the central idea in this Module 2 inquiry question.
Worked example
Exam-style question
Explain why the composition of blood changes as it moves from the lungs to body tissues.
Worked answer
At the lungs, oxygen diffuses into the blood and carbon dioxide diffuses out, so blood leaving the lungs has more oxygen and less carbon dioxide. As the blood moves through body tissues, oxygen is taken up by cells for respiration and carbon dioxide is added as a waste product, so its composition changes.
Why this works
This answer:
identifies where the change happens
explains what is added and removed
links the change to respiration
Common mistakes
Saying blood has the same composition everywhere in the body.
Forgetting that nutrients are added to blood after absorption in the small intestine.
Saying xylem transports sugars.
Saying phloem transports only wastes.
Treating plant and animal transport changes as identical.
Quick quiz
What is a transport medium?
Why does blood leaving the lungs differ from blood leaving body tissues?
Where are nutrients added to blood in mammals?
What is added to phloem in leaves?
Why does the composition of transport media change as they move around an organism?

Comments