picture guide to chapter 8 photosynthesis. 8-1 energy and life

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Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthe sis

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Page 1: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Picture Guide to Chapter 8

Photosynthesis

Page 2: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

8-1 Energy and Life

Page 3: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Objectives• Explain where plants get the

energy they need to produce food

• Describe the role of ATP in cellular activities

Page 4: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Q: Where does energy come from?

A: Our food, but originally the energy in food comes from the sun

Page 5: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Autotrophs• Make their own food

Page 6: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Heterotrophs• Cannot make their own food

Page 7: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Chemical Energy and ATP

• The principal chemical compounds that cells use to store and release energy is called ATP adenosine triphosphate

Page 8: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Storing Energy• ATP stores energy in the third

phosphate

• ATP is like a fully charged battery

Page 9: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Releasing EnergyQ: How is the energy in ATP released?

A: Break bond between the second and 3rd phosphates

ADP

2

Page 10: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life
Page 11: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

ATP Formation - Using Biomechanical Energy

• Active Transport

• Movement of organelles throughout cell

• Synthesis of proteins and nucleic acids

• Produce light– Blink of firefly caused by an enzyme

powered by ATP

Page 12: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

ATP Availability

• Most cells only have enough ATP for a few seconds of activity

• Why?– Not good at storing energy over the long term– Glucose stores 90 times the chemical energy

of ATP– Cells generate ATP from ADP as needed by

using the energy in foods like glucose

Page 13: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Photosynthesis• The process in which plants use

the energy of sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into high energy carbohydrates – sugars and starches – and oxygen as a waste product

Page 14: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Photosynthesis

Page 15: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

The Photosynthesis Equation

CO2 + H2O +C6H12O6 O2light

(Carbon Dioxide) (Water) (Sun) (Glucose) (Oxygen)

Page 16: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Chlorophyll• The plants principal pigment,

absorbs light energy in the blue-violet and red spectrum of visible light

Page 17: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Absorption of Light byChlorophyll a and Chlorophyll bAbsorption of Light byChlorophyll a and Chlorophyll b

V B G YO R

Chlorophyll b

Chlorophyll a

Page 18: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Because light is a form of energy…

• Anything that absorbs light also absorbs the energy from that light

• When chlorophyll absorbs light, much of the energy is transferred to electrons in the chlorophyll molecule, raising the energy level of these electrons

• These high-energy electrons make photosynthesis work

Page 19: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

8-3 The Reactions of Photosynthesis

Page 20: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life
Page 21: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Thylakoids• Sac-like photosynthetic

membranes arranged in stacks

Page 22: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Grana• Stacks of thylakoids

Page 23: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Stroma• The region outside the thylakoid

Page 24: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Scientists describe the reactions of photosynthesis in two parts

1. Light – dependent reactions (takes place in the thylakoid membranes)

2. Light – independent reactions (takes place in stroma)

Page 25: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life
Page 26: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Carrier Molecule• Compound that can accept a pair

of high energy electrons and transfer them along with most of their energy to another molecule

• Ex.) NADP+

Page 27: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life
Page 28: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Q: What does this do?• NADP+ NADPH

A: this traps sunlight in chemical form

Page 29: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Light Dependent Reactions

• Uses energy from light to produce

1. Oxygen gas

2. ATP

3. NADPH

Page 30: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Fig. 8-10

Page 31: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

The Calvin Cycle• The ATP and NADPH formed by the light-

dependent reactions contain an abundance of chemical energy, but they are not stable enough to store that energy for more than a few minutes.

• The Calvin cycle uses ATP and NADPH from light – dependent reactions to produce high energy sugars

Page 32: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

The Calvin Cycle• These reactions don’t require

light, therefore these reactions are called

• Light – independent reactions

Page 33: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Fig 8.11

Page 34: Picture Guide to Chapter 8 Photosynthesis. 8-1 Energy and Life

Factors Affecting Photosynthesis

• Not enough water

• Temperature

• Light intensity