Plant systems B:
Photosynthesis, nutrition and respiration
All living things require energy. The energy source for all life on
Earth is ultimately the Sun. Without the ability of plant pigments to
capture the Sun's light energy, life as we know it on Earth would not
exist.
Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis is the process by which plant cells
make sugar (glucose) using sunlight energy, water and carbon dioxide.
The sugar is then transported to all parts of the plant and used as
an energy source for growth and survival, or stored as starch for later
use. Animals eating these plants obtain this ready-made energy source.
A green pigment, chlorophyll, is stored within small organelles called
chloroplasts within many plant cells. It is mainly found in leaves and
stems, thereby giving these parts a green appearance.
Chlorophyll, an iron-based molecule, can absorb light and become
energised, and then pass on this energy to combine the water and carbon
dioxide molecules to form sugar.
Water travels up from the soil through roots and xylem tubes (see Plant
systems A: Transport and support) and the carbon dioxide moves into
the leaf cells through small holes in the leaf surface called stomata.
Whole plant showing water passing from soil up roots and xylem, and
carbon dioxide entering leaves.
The chemical equation for photosynthesis is:
|
light
|
|
6 CO2 + 12H2 O |
|
C6 H12 O6
+ 6 H2 O + 6 O2 |
Six molecules of carbon dioxide combine with twelve molecules of
water in the presence of light to form one molecule of glucose sugar,
six molecules of water and six molecules of oxygen.
Oxygen is a by-product of this process. Any excess oxygen not required
by the plant is released into the atmosphere, and is therefore available
for animals to use.
Nutrition
Further uptake of other minerals from the soil provides the necessary
elements required by the plant to make proteins and all other substances
for growth and functioning of the plant. These too are taken in by animals
when they eat the plant as food.
Respiration
Since all living things need energy, animals are ultimately dependent
on plants for food.
In the mitochondria (see Animal
cells) of all plant and animal cells, the energy trapped in the
sugar molecule is released during the process of cellular respiration.
The sugar combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide (CO2)
and water as by-products, and the energy is given off.
6 O2 + C6 H12O6 |
|
6CO2 + H2O + ENERGY |
Six molecules of oxygen combine with one molecule of sugar to form
ENERGY, plus six molecules of carbon dioxide and six molecules of water.
Note that carbon dioxide is a by-product of respiration, which
is then available for plants to use in photosynthesis. In other words,
plants and animals are interdependent and the balance of oxygen and
carbon dioxide in nature is vitally important.
The energy released in respiration is available for movement, growth,
and all the life functions ("metabolism").
Cellular respiration is the exact opposite to the chemical reaction
of photosynthesis.
A healthy plant in good growing conditions produces more sugar through
photosynthesis than it uses up in cellular respiration. It also produces
more oxygen than it needs, so a supply of both food and oxygen for animals
is maintained. The logging of vast areas of rainforest can greatly upset
this balance in nature because photosynthesis is reduced.
|