Osmosis - The movement of water molecules only.
Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules, from a region where the water molecules are in higher concentration, to a region where they are in lower concentration, through a partially permeable membrane.
A dilute solution contains a high concentration of water molecules, while a concentrated solution contains a low concentration of water molecules.
SOURCE: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/ztrgng8/revision/3
Cells contain dilute solutions of ions, sugars, and amino acids.
The cell membrane is partially permeable. It allows small molecules such as water through but not larger molecules. Water may move into and out of cells by osmosis.
Isolated plant cells placed in a dilute solution or water will take in water by osmosis. Root hair cell, if the soil is wet or moist, will also take up water osmosis. Leaf cells of land plants, unless it is raining or the humidity is high, will have a tendency to lose water.
Plant cells have a strong cellulose cell wall outside the cell membrane. The cell wall is fully permeable to all molecules and supports the cell and stops it bursting when it gains water by osmosis.
If plant cells are placed in solutions of increasing solute concentration:
In pure water, the cell contents (the cytoplasm and vacuole) push against the cell wall and the cell becomes turgid .
Fully turgid cells support the stems of non-woody plants.
In a more concentrated solution, the cell contents lose water by osmosis. They shrink and pull away from the cell wall. The cell becomes flaccid. It is becoming plasmolysed.
In a very concentrated solution, the cell undergoes full plasmolysis as the cells lose more water.
Plants would be exposed to higher concentrations of solutes if there was less water in the soil - for instance, if plants were not watered, or plants in drought conditions. Plant cells would then lose water by osmosis.
Acquatic, freshwater plants placed in the sea, or a seaweed in a rock pool where the water evaporated in the Sun, would also lose water by osmosis.
Animal cells also take in and lose water by osmosis. They do not have a cell wall, so will change size and shape when put into solutions that are at a different concentration to the cell contents.
For example, red blood cells could:
In animals, the concentration of body fluids – blood plasma and tissue fluid – must be kept within strict limits – if cells lose or gain too much water by osmosis, they do not function efficiently.
This video features real life examples of osmosis, important vocabulary, and introduces concept of water potential and turgor pressure in plant cells. Time-stamped Table of Contents. Contents: 00:00 Video Intro 0:59 Osmosis Definition 4:20 Osmosis in Animal Cells Example 7:00 Osmosis in Plant Cells Example 7:30 Water Potential