8 the green world’s gift: photosynthesis. photosynthesis and energy (section 8.1) 1.try to name...

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8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis

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Page 1: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

8

The Green World’s Gift:

Photosynthesis

Page 2: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1)

1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal that ate a plant.

2.All food comes from plants. Molecules of our bodies are made from food we eat, but plants make their own food from sunlight. Food is used for:

a) Creating macromolecules from monomers like glucose and amino acids.

Page 3: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

b) More importantly, food is used in respiration to generate cellular energy, ATP. Plants are the nearly universal source of energy for all living things.

c) Plants take energy-poor reactants (water and carbon dioxide) and use solar energy to drive the uphill reaction of trapping those reactants in complex, ordered bonds of glucose.

Page 4: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

3.Oxygen needed for respiration is produced as a by-product of photosynthesis.

Page 5: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

A. Nature of Light

1. Energetic rays have different wavelengths in a spectrum from gamma rays to radio waves, only a portion of which is visible light:

2. Explain what it means to see a plant as red or green in terms of absorption and reflection, and why a black car is hotter on a sunny day than a white car. (Black absorbs all light and reflects none, white absorbs little and reflects almost all.) Explain what it means to absorb light by a pigment.

Page 6: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

3.Photosynthesis driven by only part of the visible spectrum (blue and red); plant pigments in the green plant reflects green and absorbs blue and red.

Page 7: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Tour of a leaf, where plants absorb light: Figure 8.3

1. Blade

2. Leaf section, epidermis, stomata, mesophyll

3. Chloroplasts, innerand outer membranes

4. Grana and stroma5. Thylakoid membrane,

and compartment6. Pigments

Page 8: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Stomates

Page 9: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Leaf cross section

Page 10: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

C. Photosynthesis occurs in two essential phases.

1.Light-dependent—“photo” of photosynthesis.

a) Power of sunlight excites electrons in pigment molecules.

b) Excited electrons are carried down transport chain of redox reactions like those in mitochondria.

Page 11: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

C. Photosynthesis occurs in two essential phases.

1.Light-dependent—“photo” of photosynthesis.

c) Energy is used to make a gradient of H+ ions to drive synthesis of ATP, and electrons may be transferred by a carrier molecule like NAD+, NADP+.

d) Pigment electrons are replaced by electrons stripped from water, making O2 gas.

2. Light-independent

a) ATP and NADPH are not good permanent storage molecules, so the plants covert energy into several bonds in a glucose molecule.

b) Electrons from carriers are brought together with CO2 and H2O to make this glucose.

Page 12: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

D. Photosystems are the working units that absorb solar energy.

1.Aggregates of hundreds of pigment molecules serve as antenna to absorb solar energy.

2.Reaction center of aggregate contains pair of chlorophyll molecules with electrons that absorb the energy and jump to electron carrier molecules: Figure 8.4

Page 13: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal
Page 14: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

E. Energy transfer is possible using redox reactions.

1.One substance loses electrons (oxidized) while another gains electrons (reduced).

2.Electrons move down the energy hill, losing energy as they go (analogy of the passing of a hot potato warming each hand as it drops, giving off some heat as it goes. The last person to get the potato gets some heat and food as well.) The final recipient of the electron in this case is NADP+: Figure 8.5

Page 15: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

A. Follow the pathway:

1.Photosystem II absorbs solar energy.

2.Electron jumps to the primary electron acceptor.3.Chlorophyll is left without an electron, making it

an oxidizing agent that grabs an electron from water, splitting it into H+ ions and O2.

4.Ejected electron falls back down the energy hill through a series of electron transfer molecules and a series of redox reactions until it reaches photosystem I (another reaction center also receiving solar energy).

Page 16: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal
Page 17: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Light-Dependent Reactions A. Follow the pathway: Figure 8.5

animated in the resources for this chapter as figure 8_05.

5.Again, energized electrons from photosystem I are transferred back down the energy hill, until they are received by NADP+, an electron carrier that ferries electrons to the second stage, the light-independent stage of photosynthesis.

6.Travel took place from thylakoid to stroma: Figure 8.6

Page 18: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

B. Importance of the light-dependent phase

1.Oxygen formation

2.Energized electrons being transferred, not just giving off heat of fluorescing, and ferried in NADPH.

3.Formation of ATP, which is used to power the second stage, the light-independent reactions.

Page 19: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

A. The Calvin (C3) Cycle: the “synthesis” of photosynthesis, making food, trapping CO2: Figure 8.7

1.Enzyme called rubisco brings together CO2 and sugar, carbon fixation—three low-energy molecules of CO2 from the atmosphere are combined with three five-carbon sugars (RuBP).

2.Six-carbon product is unstable and splits into two three-carbon products (3-PGA).

Page 20: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

3.ATP places a phosphate group on each 3-PGA, and NADPH donates a pair of electrons yielding a high energy food, G3P.

4.Only one G3P exits the cycle; the other five are used to regenerate the starting material RuBP.

Page 21: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

A. Glitch in the system—Photorespiration

1.Rusbisco often combines O2 instead of CO2 with RuBP, unproductively.

2.Occurs one O2 for every three CO2.

3.Undercuts food production in crops that use C3 cycle.

4.Especially problematic in hot weather because of evaporation of water. Plant closes stomata in leaves to prevent evaporation, but as water is kept in, CO2 is kept out. As the light-dependent reactions continue, O2 builds up, combining with RuBP unproductively.

Page 22: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

1.Grasses, corn, sugarcane, and sorghum

2.Use a different enzyme located in bundle-sheath cells: Figure 8.10

3.Costs ATP to shuttle CO2 to bundle-sheath cells; in sunny climates this is not an issue, because with abundant sunlight, ATP is plentiful.

4. In northern climates, C4 plants are not as well adapted.

Page 23: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

CAM Plants—another adaptation that saves water in hot climates (Section 8.8)A. Cactus, pineapple, mint, and orchid

B. Close stomata during the day, open at night

C. Start C4 metabolism at night by fixing CO2 but wait for day to use abundant ATP to finish.

D. Comparison of three strategies: Figure 8.12

Page 24: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal
Page 25: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

Summary of Photosynthesis in most kinds of plants

Page 26: 8 The Green World’s Gift: Photosynthesis. Photosynthesis and Energy (Section 8.1) 1.Try to name something you eat that isn’t from a plant or from an animal

The End