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
Food for thought… 1. What goes in and where does it enter? 2. What comes out? 3. Where does the matter in the tree come from? Answers: Plants make their food! • 1. CO2 enters a plant through pores in leaves; Water enters through the roots; Sunlight is absorbed by structures in the leaves. • 2. Oxygen is released through pores in the leaves. • 3. The matter comes from atoms in the Carbon dioxide and water! Where does the cow get mass and energy? 4. What goes in? 5. What comes out? Answers: • 4. Food (including Glucose) and Oxygen • 5. Carbon Dioxide and Water How do plants get organic molecules and energy? • They make them! • Using the energy in sunlight, plants convert the inorganic Carbon in CO2 to simple sugars (organic molecules) and oxygen (O2). • This process is called Photosynthesis. Is making sugars by photosynthesis all a plant needs? • NO • The plant ALSO releases the chemical energy stored in the sugars to grow (as do all animals!). • This 2nd process is called CELLULAR RESPIRATION. How do animals get organic molecules and energy? • We cannot convert inorganic Carbon (CO2) to organic molecules. • We consume Food! • Like plants, we convert the chemical energy in food to a form the cell can use by CELLULAR RESPIRATION. Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration provide Organic molecules AND Energy for ALL life • Energy is necessary for ALL life processes – These include growth, transport, manufacture, movement, reproduction, and others – Energy that supports life on Earth comes from sun’s light energy captured and transformed by plants! Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. What is Photosynthesis? The process of photosynthesis is a series of chemical reactions. It is the most important chemical process on our planet!! Why is Photosynthesis important? • It is the key process on Earth that transforms light energy to chemical energy that is stored in the bonds of organic sugars (like GLUCOSE) • It is the main way energy is introduced into life on Earth! Who does it? Plants, algae & some bacteria & protists Photosynthesis Use Light To synthesize i.e., MAKE Food Plants = Autotrophs Self Food • Autotrophs make their own food without using organic molecules from other organisms – Photoautotrophs - use light energy to make organic “food” molecules – Examples: – Plants, algae, some bacteria, some protists – CRITICAL to all Ecosystems as Producers of the Biosphere! Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Plant Power – Earth’s plants produce 160 billion metric tons of sugar each year through photosynthesis, a process that converts solar energy to chemical energy Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. What is the SUMMARY equation for the chemical reaction of photosynthesis? Sunlight (ENERGY!) 6CO2+6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 Glucose! Summary questions: 1. Where does the plants organic mass come from? 2. Where does the energy come from to make the organic molecules? 3. What do we call the above process? 4. What process converts the energy in the sugars to a form that plants and animals can use? What is the SUMMARY equation for the chemical reaction of photosynthesis? Sunlight (ENERGY!) 6CO2+6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 Glucose! A Disclaimer…… • Actually, Photosynthesis does NOT directly produce glucose- it produces simple 3 Carbon sugars that can be joined to form glucose. It is typically written this way because it flows better with Cellular Respiration…… Where does Photosynthesis happen? • Mostly in leaf cells Photosynthesis in Chloroplasts! • What are Chloroplasts? • organelles that consist of photosynthetic pigments, enzymes, and other molecules grouped together in membranes Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chloroplast: Structure = Function • Thylakoids location of light absorbing pigments • CHLOROPHYLL, a key light absorbing pigment, plays a BIG role in photosynthesis Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Gives plants their GREEN color. Thyme-moss cells Break it down: 2 Stages to Photosynthesis • Photosynthesis occurs in two linked metabolic stages – Stage 1: The Light Reactions – Stage 2: The Calvin Cycle Copyrght © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Each reactant is important for a different cycle. SNEAK PREVIEW Stage 1: The Light Reactions – Main purpose: – Convert light energy to chemical energy – Where it occurs: – Thylakoid membrane (in granum) – What happens (part of the rxn): – H2O and SUNLIGHT come in. – H2O is split (need that H!) – leftover oxygen is released. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Absorption of VISIBLE light DRIVES the Light Reactions • Sunlight = ENERGY called electromagnetic radiation (ER) – Visible light (ROY G BIV) is only a small part – Travels in waves w/different lengths. • Light behaves as discrete packets of energy called PHOTONS SHORT wavelength = HIGH energy LONG wavelength = LOW energy Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Increasing energy 10–5 nm 10–3 nm Gamma rays X-rays 103 nm 1 nm UV 106 nm Infrared 103 m 1m Microwaves Radio waves Visible light 380 400 600 500 Wavelength (nm) 700 650 nm 750 Stage 1: The Light Reactions, cont. • Pigments = molecules that ABSORB light • Found in the Thylakoid membrane • ABSORB some wavelengths of light and reflect (aka TRANSMIT) others *We SEE the color that is TRANSMITTED. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Light Reflected light Chloroplast Absorbed light Thylakoid Transmitted light Visible radiation drives the light reactions PIGMENT ABSORBS TRANSMITS Chlorophyll a blue violet; red green Chlorophyll b blue; orange yellowgreen Carotenoids yellow; orange Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. blue-green Photosystems capture Visible Light Energy! • Pigments absorb photons of light – release e• 1) e- jump to higher energy level = excited state (unstable) • 2) e- electrons drop back to a stable ground state, emitting the energy Excited state e– Heat Photon Photon (fluorescence) Ground state Chlorophyll molecule Photosystems capture solar power and transform it to chemical Energy • The energy released from the e- is passed from one pigment molecule to another Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Step 1: Light Reactions, cont. • The harvested light energy is transformed into the chemical energy of ATP and NADPH by the 2 Photosystems (Photosystem I & PhotosystemII) Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. • Eventually, the energy is passed to the Reaction center that is able to DONATE a high energy ELECTRON! Chemical Energy: NADPH & ATP • Electrons from split H2O are passed through two photosystems (II and I) and are accepted by NADP+ NADP+ Photosystem II Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Photosystem I NADPH Chemical Energy: NADPH & ATP • Between photosystems is an e- transport chain that provides energy to make ATP NADP+ e- Transport Chain Photosystem II Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Photosystem I NADPH ATP!!! Chemical Energy: NADPH & ATP • NADPH and ATP are used for Stage 2: The Calvin Cycle CALVIN CYCLE NADP+ e- Transport Chain Photosystem II Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Photosystem I NADPH ATP!!! Stage 2: The Calvin Cycle – Main purpose: – Use energy from light reactions to construct Sugars! – Where it occurs: – Stroma of chloroplast – What happens: – CO2, ATP & NADPH come in. – Glucose is synthesized & exits Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Stage 2: The Calvin Cycle • Occurs outside the Thylakoids, in the chloroplast Stroma (fluid). Chloroplast Stage 2: The Calvin Cycle, cont. • A cyclic series of reactions • Uses the energy from the light reactions to build sugar molecules (organic molecules) from CO2 (inorganic carbon) • Process called Carbon Fixation Calvin Cycle, cont. – Where does the energy to build the sugar come from? – ATP and NADPH (from the light reactions) provide the chemical energy – The Calvin cycle is sometimes called the dark (or light-independent) reactions CO2 H2O Chloroplast Light NADP+ ADP P LIGHT REACTIONS CALVIN CYCLE (in stroma) (in thylakoids) ATP NADPH O2 Sugar Don’t worry about the details Photosynthesis – The fate of sugar! • Conundrum: leaves are mostly responsible for photosynthesis, but the entire plant needs energy! • Sugars move through tubes in the leaf to the roots, stems, fruits etc • Some sugar used immediately by cellular respiration! • Some stored as starch • Some built into plant tissue Why Photosynthesis is essential to life on Earth: • The energy that was in sunlight was transformed into chemical energy in sugars by photosynthesis!! • CO2 has been converted to organic carbon in MATTER that all organisms can use as a source of Carbon! • Oxygen is produced and released to the atmosphere Light Reactions Where? Reactants Products Purpose of Reaction Calvin Cycle Photosynthesis Where does it occur?(organelle) Why is it important? What is the Substrate? Products? What is the formula? Who does it? (Plant, Animal) Respiration