Top Banner
Review Cellular Respiration http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=2IGIyA57Brc&feature=related - Cellular respiration and emphasis on the electron transport chain
40

Review Cellular Respiration A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Jan 05, 2016

Download

Documents

Randall Mills
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Review Cellular Respiration

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IGIyA57Brc&feature=related

- Cellular respiration and emphasis on the electron transport chain

Page 2: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Photosynthesis

Why do we need to know this?

Page 3: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Photosynthesis

Why do we need to know this?

Renewable energy sources

Global Warming

Where our food comes from…..

YOU need to make lifestyle CHOICESand VOTE in a democracy that is

facing these DIFFICULT ISSUES

Page 4: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.
Page 5: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.
Page 6: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.
Page 7: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.
Page 8: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Biology and Society: Plant Power for Power Plants

– On a global scale the productivity of photosynthesis is astounding.

– All of the food consumed by humans can be traced back to photosynthetic plants.

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 9: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– An “energy plantation”• Is a renewable energy source.

Page 10: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Basics of Photosynthesis– Almost all plants are photosynthetic

autotrophs, as are some bacteria and protists.• They generate their own organic matter through

photosynthesis.

Page 11: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Chloroplasts: Sites of Photosynthesis

– Chloroplasts• Are found in the interior cells of leaves.• Contain stroma, a thick fluid.• Contain thylakoids, membranous sacs.

Page 12: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Overall Equation for Photosynthesis

– The reactants and products of the reaction

Page 13: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– In photosynthesis,

• Energized electrons are added to carbon dioxide to make sugar.

• Sunlight provides the energy.

Page 14: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

A Photosynthesis Road Map

– Photosynthesis is composed of two processes:

•The light reactions convert solar energy to chemical energy.

•The Calvin cycle makes sugar from carbon dioxide.

Page 15: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Light Reactions: Converting Solar Energy to Chemical Energy

– Chloroplasts are chemical factories powered by the sun

• That convert solar energy into chemical energy.

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 16: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Nature of Sunlight– Sunlight is a type of energy called radiation

• Or electromagnetic energy.

– The full range of radiation is called the electro-magnetic spectrum.

Page 17: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Figure 7.5

Page 18: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Process of Science: What Colors of Light Drive

Photosynthesis?– In 1883, German biologist Theodor

Engelmann• Performed an experiment using bacteria and algae

and determined that certain types of light drive photosynthesis.

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 19: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Figure 7.6

Page 20: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– Chloroplasts absorb select wavelengths of light that drive photosynthesis.

Light and Pigments

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJCVg9M-7S0

Page 21: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Figure 7.7

Page 22: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Chloroplast Pigments– Chloroplasts contain several pigments:

• Chlorophyll a • Chlorophyll b • Carotenoids

Page 23: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

How Photosystems Harvest Light Energy

– Light behaves as photons, discrete packets of energy.

– Chlorophyll molecules absorb photons.• Electrons in the pigment gain energy.

Image from Purves et al., Life: The Science of Biology, 4th Edition, by Sinauer Associates (www.sinauer.com) and WH Freeman (www.whfreeman.com)

Page 24: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Figure 7.9

Check out: http://science.howstuffworks.com/light-stick.htm

Page 25: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– A photosystem• Is an organized group of chlorophyll and other

molecules.• Is a light-gathering antenna.

Page 26: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

How the Light Reactions Generate ATP and NADPH

Page 27: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– Two types of photosystems cooperate in the light reactions.

Page 28: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– An electron transport chain• Connects the two photosystems.• Releases energy that the chloroplast uses to

make ATP.

Page 29: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– The light reactions in the thylakoid membrane

Light Reactions

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v590JJV96lc&feature=related

Page 30: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Calvin Cycle: Making Sugar from Carbon Dioxide

– The Calvin cycle• Functions like a sugar factory within a

chloroplast.• Regenerates the starting material with each

turn.

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Calvin Cycle

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHU27qYJNU0

Page 31: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Figure 7.14

Page 32: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Water-Saving Adaptations of C4 and CAM Plants

– C3 plants

• Use CO2 directly from the air.

– Thus, C3 plants depend on the constant opening of their stomata to produce sugar.

• Are very common and widely distributed.

• Examples: rice, wheat, soybeans

Page 33: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– C4 plants (corn, sugarcane)• Close their stomata to save water during hot and dry

weather.• Can still carry out photosynthesis.

– CAM plants (pineapple, cactus)• Open their stomata only at night to conserve water.

Page 34: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

A review of photosynthesis

Page 35: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

The Environmental Impact of Photosynthesis

– Photosynthesis has an enormous impact on the atmosphere.

• It swaps O2 for CO2.

• It moderates global warming

Page 36: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

How Photosynthesis Moderates Global Warming– Greenhouses used to grow plant indoors

• Trap sunlight that warms the air inside.

Page 37: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– A similar process, the greenhouse effect,• Warms the atmosphere.

• Is caused by atmospheric CO2.

Page 38: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– Greenhouse gases are the most likely cause of global warming, a slow but steady rise in the Earth’s surface temperature.

• Destruction of forests may be increasing this effect.

Page 39: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

Evolution Connection:The Oxygen Revolution

– The atmospheric oxygen we breathe is a by-product of photosynthesis.

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Page 40: Review Cellular Respiration  A57Brc&feature=related A57Brc&feature=related - Cellular.

– Cyanobacteria were the first organisms to carry out photosynthesis.

– The production of oxygen changed the Earth forever.

• The “oxygen revolution” was a major episode in the history of life on Earth.