Chapter 10 Photosynthesis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 69
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 10 Photosynthesis

Description:

Examples - sugarcane, Bermuda grass, crab grass. C3 Ps vs C4 Ps ... CAM Ps. Crassulacean ... CAM plants. Tissues decrease in pH over night, rise in pH ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 70
Provided by: james949
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 10 Photosynthesis


1
Chapter 10 Photosynthesis
2
Photosynthesis
  • Process by which plants use light energy to make
    food.
  • A reduction process that makes complex organic
    molecules from simple molecules.

3
Ps General Equation
  • 6 CO2 6 H2O ---gt C6H12O6 6 O2
  • Requires
  • Chlorophyll
  • Light

4
Question
  • Does the Oxygen in sugar come from the CO2 or
    from the H2O ?
  • Model
  • CO2 2 H2O ----gt CH2O O2

5
Proof
  • Used 18O as a tracer.
  • CO2 2 H2O ----gt CH2O O2
  • CO2 2 H2O ----gt CH2O O2
  • Both experiments confirm that water is split.
  • O2 is a waste product of Ps that altered life on
    earth.

6
Ps a redox process
  • Hydrogens are added to Carbons.
  • Water is a source for the Hydrogens.
  • Complex covalent bonds are made.

7
Ps
  • Has two chemical reactions
  • 1. Light Reaction
  • 2. Dark Reaction
  • Names are from light as a requirement, not
    where or when they occur.

8
Light
  • A form of electromagnetic radiation.
  • Visible light has the right energy for use in Ps.

9
Too Hot
Too Cold
Just Right
10
(No Transcript)
11
Action Spectrum
  • Not all colors are useable to the same degree for
    Ps.
  • Red and Blue light - absorbed and used in Ps.
  • Green light - reflected or transmitted.

12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
Comment
  • In oceans, red light is lost or filtered out
    early because it has lower energy.
  • Only blue light which has higher energy can reach
    the lower depths.

15
Result
  • Many deep ocean fish are bright red in color.
  • Why?
  • They cant be seen because there is no red light
    to reflect their color.

16
Photosynthesis Pigments
  • 1. Chlorophylls
  • 2. Accessory Pigments

17
Chlorophylls
  • Has CHON and Mg.
  • Several types possible.
  • Molecule has a lipophilic tail that allows it to
    dissolve into membranes.
  • Contains Mg in a reaction center.

18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
Accessory Pigments
  • Absorb light energy and transfer it to
    chlorophyll.
  • Ex Carotene (orange). Xanthophyll
    (yellow)

21
Fall Leaf Colors
  • Chlorophyll breaks down.
  • N and Mg salvaged and moved into the stem for
    next year.
  • Accessory pigments remain behind, giving the
    various fall leaf colors.

22
Chloroplast Structure
  • Double outer membrane.
  • Inner membrane folded and stacked into grana.
  • Stroma - liquid that surrounds the thylakoid
    membranes.

23
(No Transcript)
24
Photosystems
  • Collection of pigments that serve as a light
    trap.
  • Made of chlorophyll and the accessory pigments.
  • Two types known PSI, PSII

25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Cyclic Photophosphorylation
  • Uses PSI only.
  • Produces ATP.
  • Requires light.

28
(No Transcript)
29
Noncyclic Photophsphorylation
  • Uses PSI and PSII.
  • Splits water, releasing H, a pair of e-,
    and O2.
  • Produces ATP and NADPH. (e- carrier similar to
    NADH)

30
Light Reaction
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
(No Transcript)
35
Light Reaction
  • Same thing as Noncyclic Photophsphorylation.
  • Location - grana of the chloroplast.
  • Function - to split water and produce ATP and
    NADPH.

36
Light Reaction
Requirements
Products
  • Light
  • Water
  • ADP Pi
  • NADP
  • O2
  • ATP
  • NADPH

37
Chemiosmosis Model
  • The chloroplast produces ATP in the same manner
    as the mitochondria in Rs.
  • Light energy is used to pump H across a
    membrane.
  • When the H diffuses back, ATP is generated.

38
Chemiosmosis
  • H are pumped into the thylakoid space.
  • ATP and NADPH are made when the H diffuse into
    the stroma.

39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
Comment
  • There can be a 3 pH unit difference between the
    thylakoid space and the stroma.

42
(No Transcript)
43
Movie - Summary
44
Dark Reactions
  • How plants actually makes food (carbohydrates).
  • Don't require light directly to run.
  • Also known as the Calvin cycle or C3
    Ps.

45
Movie
46
Dark Reaction
  • Function - to use ATP and NADPH to build food
    from CO2
  • Location - stroma of the chloroplast.

47
Rubisco
  • Ribulose BisPhosphate Carboxylase.
  • Enzyme that adds CO2 to an acceptor molecule.
  • Most important enzyme on earth.

48
(No Transcript)
49
(No Transcript)
50
(No Transcript)
51
C3 Ps
Requirements
Products
  • 6 CO2
  • 18 ATP
  • 12 NADPH
  • C6H12O6
  • 18 ADP 18 Pi
  • 12 NADP

52
(No Transcript)
53
Photorespiration
  • When Rubisco accepts O2 instead of CO2 as the
    substrate.
  • Generates no ATP.
  • Decreases Ps output by as much as 50.

54
Photorespiration
  • May reflect a time when O2 was less plentiful and
    CO2 was more common.

55
Alternate Ps Methods
  • 1. C4 Ps
  • 2. CAM Ps

56
C4 Ps
  • Uses a different enzyme to initially capture CO2
  • Separates CO2 capture from carbon fixation into
    sugar.
  • Still uses C3 Ps to make sugar, but only does so
    in the bundle sheath cells.

57
PEP Carboxylase
  • Enzyme used for CO2 capture in C4 Ps.
  • Can use CO2 down to 0 ppm.
  • Prevents photorespiration.

58
(No Transcript)
59
C4 Ps
  • Found in 19 plant families.
  • Characteristic of hot regions with intense
    sunlight.
  • Examples - sugarcane, Bermuda grass, crab grass

60
C3 Ps vs C4 Ps
  • Photorespiration
  • Shade to full sun
  • High water use
  • Cool temperatures
  • Slow to moderate growth rates
  • Cool season crops
  • No Photorespiration
  • Full sun only
  • Moderate water use
  • Warm temperatures
  • Very fast growth rates
  • Warm season crops

61
CAM Ps
  • Crassulacean Acid Metabolism
  • Found in plants from arid conditions where water
    stress is a problem.
  • Examples - cacti, succulents, pineapples, many
    orchids.

62
CAM Ps
  • Open stomata at night to take in CO2.
  • The CO2 is stored as a C4 acid.
  • During the day, the acid is broken down and CO2
    is fixed into sugar.

63
CAM plants
  • Tissues decrease in pH over night, rise in pH
    during day.
  • Avoid H2O stress by keeping stomates closed
    during the day.
  • Generally have slow growth.

64
(No Transcript)
65
PsRs Ratios
  • Reflect a plants balance in making food and
    using food.
  • 1. Ps gt Rs, energy available for growth and
    reproduction.
  • 2. Ps Rs, no growth, but dont die either.
  • 3. Ps lt Rs, death by starvation

66
Comments - PsRs
  • Rs happens 24 hours a day.
  • Ps only in light.
  • Plants overwinter on stored food when Ps gt Rs.
  • If Ps lt Rs, best solution is to increase the
    amount of light.

67
Factors That Affect Ps
  • 1. Light - quantity and quality.
  • 2. Temperature - too hot or too cold.
  • 3. CO2 - often limits C3 plants.
  • 4. Minerals - especially NPK and Mg.

68
Importances of Ps
  • 1. Food - either directly or indirectly comes
    from plants.
  • 2. Oxygen in the air.
  • 3. CO2 balance.
  • 4. Plant products.
  • 5. Life on Earth.

69
Summary
  • Know the main Ps equation.
  • Know Light Reaction.
  • Know Dark Reaction.
  • Alternate Ps forms.
  • PsRs ratios.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com