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Notes 4-1 Photosynthe sis
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Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Dec 14, 2015

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Shawna Beetham
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Page 1: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Notes 4-1

Photosynthesis

Page 2: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Sources of Energy• Nearly all living things obtain energy either

directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured during photosynthesis.

Page 3: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Autotrophs:• Organisms that

make their own food

• Example: Plants photosynthesize

Heterotrophs:• Organisms that

must consume food (cannot make their own food)

• Example: Animals eat plants or other animals

Page 4: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Photosynthesis

• Process by which a cell captures the sun’s energy and uses it to make food

• Plants convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and sugars (food)

• Photosynthesis occurs in 2 steps

Page 5: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Stage 1:

• Chlorophyll (a green pigment inside the organelle called chloroplasts in plant cells) absorbs the sunlight

• This provides the “power” for stage 2 of photosynthesis

*Chlorophyll is what makes the plants green!

Page 6: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Stage 2:• Roots of plants absorb water and it travels up

through the stem to the leaves• Carbon dioxide enters the plants through small

holes on the underside of the leaves called stomata

• Water and carbon dioxide move into the chloroplasts of the plant cells

• In the chloroplasts, a chemical reaction occurs and sugars (carbs) are produced as food for the plants and oxygen is released as a waste product through the stomata (this is the oxygen that we breathe!!)

Page 7: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

The Two Stages of Photosynthesis• Let’s look at the 2 stages again, but

with pictures this time!

Page 8: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Photosynthesis Equation

• The left side of the equation shows what the plants are using (6 molecules of CO2 and 6 molecules of H2O)

• The arrow means “yield” or “produces”• The right side of the equation shows the

products, or what the plant is making (1 molecule of sugar and 6 molecules of O2)

Page 9: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Where do plants get the water they need for photosynthesis?

• From the ground, from the rain, etc…• It travels up through their roots, through

the stem and to the leaves

Page 10: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Where do plants get the CO2 they need for photosynthesis?

• When we exhale when we breathe, we release carbon dioxide as a waste product

• Plants take it in through their leaves

Page 11: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

What do the plants do with the oxygen?

• The plants do not need the 6 molecules of oxygen, so they release it as a waste product.

• This is the oxygen gas we breathe!

Page 12: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

What do the plants do with the sugars?

• The plants use some of the sugars they make as immediate food for themselves

• Whatever they don’t use right away, they store for later

• When we eat plants (fruits and veggies) we are eating their stored energy!

Page 13: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Let’s Review!

• Name an example of an heterotroph.

• What 3 things do plants need in order to photosynthesize?

Any animal or fungus, because they cannot make their own food.

Sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide.

Page 14: Notes 4-1 Photosynthesis. Sources of Energy Nearly all living things obtain energy either directly or indirectly from the energy of sunlight captured.

Let’s Review!

• Plants are autotrophic. True or False?

• What happens to the Oxygen gas that plants release during photosynthesis?TRUE, because

they make their own food. We breathe it

in!