Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
How much mass did the tree gain? 74.7kg How much mass did the soil lose? 0.1kg How did the tree become so large? Why was the candle able to burn for several days & the mouse able to survive after a plant was added? What are the plants releasing? What do plants need in order to do this? Van Helmont showed that plants get bigger with out eating. He incorrectly concluded that it was the water that caused the increase in mass. Priestley determined that plants give off oxygen. Ingenhousz discovered that light was necessary for plants to produce oxygen. + 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 Red letters are coefficients Blue letters are subscripts Energy from sunlight Light + Carbon dioxide + Water + 6CO2 + 6H2O Reactants Reactants = Glucose + Oxygen C6H12O6 + 6O2 Products Where do the reactants come from? Chloroplast: Where photosynthesis takes place. Located in the cytoplasm of the plant cell. Chlorophyll: Captures energy from light. Makes plants green. Location: thylakoid ☼ Occur in the chloroplast when there is light. Main idea: Make ATP and oxygen from water and light H2O is split causing an ATP molecule to form & release O2. The H from the water and the ATP is used in the next reaction. Reaction detail: + H2O H + ATP + O2 Location: stroma ☼No light needed (AKA dark reaction) Main idea: Make glucose from hydrogen, carbon dioxide & ATP CO2 is split, rearranged, & bonded to H to make a 3-carbon compound. This uses the ATP from the last reaction. The 3 carbon compounds are joined making C6H12O6 Reaction detail: CO2 + H + ATP C6H12O6 We call the glucose that is produced “SAP” Glucose is transported from the chloroplasts to the rest of the plant via the Phloem. Maple Syrup from tree sap Energy for growth and reproduction of the plant To make starch called cellulose Starch and simple sugars are stored in fruits, vegetables, seeds, and grains. Here they may be used by the plant or eaten by consumers. Photosynthesis is the process of converting light, carbon dioxide, and water into glucose and oxygen. Glucose, a carbohydrate, can be stored as a starch for use later or be used to make cellulose for the cell walls of the plant. In a plant the glucose is known as sap. It is transported around the plant via tubes called phloem. Glucose is later converted into ATP in the mitochondria by the process of cellular respiration.