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🌿 P3/P4 · PSLE Topic

Plant Parts and Their Functions

Learn plant parts and functions for PSLE Science. Roots, stems, leaves, and flowers explained with Singapore examples, the role of xylem and phloem, stomata, and exam tips.

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Syllabus
P3/P4 · PSLE
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Reading time
8 minutes
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Exam weight
High — often tested
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Key skill
Apply + explain

Every Part of a Plant Has a Job

A plant is not just a pretty object — every single part is a specialised structure with one or more specific functions. The roots, stem, leaves, and flowers all work together as a system, each contributing something essential to the plant's survival and reproduction.

Understanding plant parts means understanding not just what each part does, but why it is shaped the way it is — because the shape of every plant structure is an adaptation to make it better at its job.

Plant Parts in Your Singapore Neighbourhood

The potted plants in your HDB corridor show all four main parts at once. The roots grip the potting soil and absorb water when you water the plant. The stem holds the plant upright and carries water from the roots to the leaves. The leaves face the corridor window — towards the light — to maximise photosynthesis. If you don't water for a week, the stem droops because cells lose water and go limp (loss of turgor pressure).

Carrot and sweet potato from NTUC FairPrice are examples of storage roots — the plant has converted excess glucose from photosynthesis into starch and stored it in the root. When we eat these vegetables, we are eating the plant's energy reserves.

The large leaves of banana plants in community gardens are perfectly designed for Singapore's intense equatorial sun — they are broad and flat to maximise light capture, but they also split in strong winds (those slashes in banana leaves) to reduce wind resistance and prevent the whole leaf from tearing off.

Roots: Anchorage, Absorption, and Storage

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Root hair cells work on the same principle as villi in the small intestine and alveoli in the lungs — increasing surface area dramatically improves the rate of exchange. This is one of the most important design principles in biology.

Stems: Transport and Support

Leaves: The Food Factory

Leaves are the primary site of photosynthesis. Every feature of a typical leaf is an adaptation to maximise this function:

Flowers: Reproduction

Why Does Surface Area Matter So Much in Plants?

Surface area appears again and again in plant biology because exchange processes depend on contact area. Water can only be absorbed where the root is touching soil water — more root hair cells mean more contact points, so absorption is faster. CO₂ can only enter where stomata are open — more stomata spread across a larger leaf surface mean faster CO₂ uptake and faster photosynthesis.

This is why desert plants (like cacti) have reduced leaf surface area — in dry conditions, you want to minimise water loss through stomata, so you reduce the leaf size. Singapore's tropical plants can afford large leaves because water is plentiful — there is no cost to having large stomata-covered leaves. Every plant's leaf shape is a balance between maximising photosynthesis and minimising water loss for its particular environment.

Common Mistakes

Trap 1 — Xylem carries food, phloem carries water
WRONG — it is the opposite. Xylem carries water and minerals (upward only). Phloem carries dissolved food/glucose (both up and down). This is the single most commonly reversed fact in plant biology.
Trap 2 — Stomata are only on leaves
Stomata can also be found on green stems and other green parts. However, they are most abundant on the underside of leaves for PSLE purposes.
Trap 3 — Roots only absorb water
Roots absorb both water AND dissolved minerals. Minerals (like nitrogen, phosphorus) are equally important for plant growth and cannot be made by photosynthesis.

Key Points at a Glance

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Related PSLE Topics

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Exam technique — Plant Parts and Their Functions

Plant parts questions look easy because the names are familiar — root, stem, leaf, flower. Where marks are lost is in incomplete function answers. The root does not just "absorb water." The complete function is: the root absorbs water and dissolved minerals from the soil and transports them upward through the stem to the leaves, where they are used for photosynthesis. Each function answer should state what is absorbed or transported, where it comes from, where it goes, and what it is used for. An answer that states only one of these elements scores partial marks.

The leaf is the most complex and most frequently tested plant organ. It contains chlorophyll (which absorbs light energy), carries out photosynthesis (using light energy, carbon dioxide, and water to make glucose and oxygen), and transpires (releasing water vapour through tiny pores called stomata). The stomata also serve gas exchange — carbon dioxide enters for photosynthesis and oxygen exits as a product. PSLE questions sometimes ask about what happens when stomata are blocked — photosynthesis slows (less CO₂ in) and the plant cannot transpire (less water out). Knowing both functions of stomata is important.

Questions students ask

Why do leaves have a large flat surface area?

The large flat shape maximises the surface area exposed to sunlight, which is the energy source for photosynthesis. More surface area means more chlorophyll cells can capture light simultaneously, increasing the rate of food production. The flat shape also minimises the depth of tissue light must penetrate to reach the chlorophyll-containing cells inside. In shady environments, plants often produce larger, thinner, darker green leaves to capture as much of the limited light as possible.

What would happen to a plant if all its leaves were removed?

Without leaves the plant cannot photosynthesise and cannot produce glucose — its only food source. In the short term it would use stored food reserves. As reserves depleted, it would be unable to carry out growth, repair, or reproduction. Without new leaves growing back, it would gradually weaken and die. Deciduous trees that lose all leaves in winter survive by entering dormancy with greatly reduced metabolic activity, relying on stored energy until leaves regrow in spring.