1 / 36

Chapter 7

Chapter 7. Plants and photosynthesis . Major Plant organs . Leaves – photosynthesis, gas exchange, water movement Stem – transport, made of xylem (water) and phloem (sugar) Roots - absorb water and minerals, anchor plant Flowers - reproduction Fruit/seeds – dispersion /reproduction.

meda
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 Plants and photosynthesis

  2. Major Plant organs • Leaves – photosynthesis, gas exchange, water movement • Stem – transport, made of xylem (water) and phloem (sugar) • Roots- absorb water and minerals, anchor plant • Flowers- reproduction • Fruit/seeds – dispersion /reproduction

  3. Leaf Structures • Cuticle- prevents water loss • Epidermis • Spongy and palisade parenchyma-photosynthetic • Vascular bundles- move water and sugar • Stomata/guard cells- allow for water and gas exchange

  4. Stem structures • Xylem – moves water from roots to leaves via transpiration. Active transport of minerals, osmosis, cohesion and adhesion are all involved. Water evaporates constantly from stomata • Phloem moves from source (makes or stores sugar) to sink (uses or stores sugar) as sap by Translocation

  5. Photosynthesis Overview • Two phases • Light dependent reactions in thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts • Light independent reactions or Calvin Cycle in stroma of chloroplasts

  6. Photosynthesis

  7. Light dependent reactions • Convert light energy to energy stored in ATP and NADPH using chlorophyll • Reactants- Water • Products- ATP, NADPH, and Oxygen from the splitting of water (photolysis) • Photophosphorylation, chemiosmosis

  8. Chlorophyll • Needed to absorb visible light • Acts as a catalyst • When it absorbs light electrons are excited

  9. Visible Spectrum

  10. chromatography

  11. Calvin Cycle • Uses ATP and NADPH from light reactions to energize CO2 molecules and link them together to form a glucose • Process- carbon fixation • Reactants- CO2, ATP, NADPH • Product – Glucose

  12. Light reactions details • Light reactions occur in the thylakoid membrane • Chlorophyll molecules are arranged into clusters called photosystems • Chlorophyll a and b antenna pigments surround a chlorophyll a reaction center • Antenna pigments absorb the sun’s energy and pass it to the reaction center

  13. Photosystems • Two kinds arranged in sequence along the thylakoid membrane • Photosystem II: P680 • Photosystem I:P700 • Each is associated with an electron transport chain

  14. Sequence of steps in the light reactions • Antenna pigments absorb the sun’s energy and pass it off to the reaction center of the photosystems • An electron from the reaction center becomes excited and moves to a higher energy level • The excited electron is captured by the first protein in the electron transport chain

  15. Sequence continued • The electron then “falls” down the etc and loses energy. As the electron falls down the electron transport chain H+ ions are pumped by active transport- chemiosmosis • ETChains make two products • H+ ion gradients that drive ATP production • NADPH

  16. Sequence continued • H+ ions rush through ATP synthase to make ATP • Water is split in photolysis to replace electrons lost from photosystems • This creates oxygen as a waste

  17. Calvin cycle • Occurs in stroma • Enzyme called rubiscocombines CO2 with molecules of RuBP • Energy from NADPH and ATP is used to energize the molecules . Make NADP+ and ADP • I molecule called G3P is produced and RuBPis regenerated • 2 G3Ps make 1 glucose • NADP+ and ADP are recycled back to the light reactions

  18. photorespiration Calvin cycle adaptations • C3 plants- Use normal un-modified Calvin Cycle • Dry weather causes stomates to close and plants cannot take up CO2. when CO2 levels are low rubisco will try to fix O2 instead of CO2- photorespiration- useless • C4 and CAM plants are adapted to hot dry climates

  19. C4 and CAM plants • C4- keep stomata closed to reduce water loss, converts CO2 into a 4 carbon product and shuttles it deep into the leaf- corn and sugar cane • CAM- pineapple, cacti, succulents – takes in CO2 at night when it is cool, stores CO2 as an acid. Stomates are closed all day

  20. Greenhouse effect • CO2 in our atmosphere traps radiant heat from the sun. excess CO2 is removed by plants. Without it surface temp would be -18 C • Excess CO2 and other greenhouse gases trap too much heat. • In 1850 CO2- 0.03% of atmosphere • Today CO2 – 30% of atmosphere • Development, use of fossil fuels, cutting down trees all increase CO2 in atmosphere

  21. Global climate change • Melting of polar ice • Weather changes that may effect agriculture, spread of tropical disease like malaria • Widespread drought

More Related