Transport system in plants is less elaborate than in animals. So, the only substances which are to be supplied to a plant through a transport system are water and minerals (which they can’t get from the air). Another job of the transport system of plants is to transport food prepared in the leaves to the various parts of the plants like stems, roots, etc.
The water and minerals dissolved in it move from the roots of the plant to its leaves through the two kinds of elements of the xylem tissue called xylem vessels and tracheids . Xylem vessels and tracheids are both non-living conducting tissues which have thick walls.
Wood is made almost entirely of lignified xylem vessels. Xylem vessels have pits in their thick cell walls. Pits are not open pores. Pits are the thin areas of the cell wall where no lignin has been deposited. Pits have unthickened cellulose cell wall.
The transport of water and dissolved sugar and mineral salts takes place by two methods in higher plants.
The plants take in water (containing dissolved minerals) from the soil through their roots. This water (containing minerals) called sap is carried by the xylem vessels to all the parts of the plant.
Stomata are main site for transpiration. The term stomata was given by Malphighi. Stomata are the openings found an the epidermis of leaves & young stems. It is responsible for about 90-97% of the total foliar transpiration.Stomata are mostly found on the lower surface of the leaf, but may occur on both the surfaces. With the exception of few submerged hydrophytes, stomata are widely distributed amongst angiosperms and gymnosperms. Functional stomata are also found in some primitive vascular plants (e.g., horsetails) and mosses.