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Chloroplast

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Chloroplast Organelle where photosynthesis takes place Contain chemical compounds called: Chlorophyll Leaf Structure Chloroplasts are concentrated in the mesophyll of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chloroplast


1
Chloroplast
  • Organelle where photosynthesis takes place
  • Contain chemical compounds called Chlorophyll

2
Leaf Structure
  • Chloroplasts are concentrated in the mesophyll of
    the leaf
  • Tiny pores in the lower epidermis (stomata)
    allows for CO2 to enter and O2 to exit.
  • Veins carry water and nutrient from the plants
    roots to the leaves

3
Chloroplast Structure
  • Has inner and outer membranes
  • Inner membrane encloses a thick fluid called
    STROMA
  • Floating in the stroma are disk-shaped sacs
    called Thylakoids.(arranged in stacks called
    GRANA)

4
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5
Thylakoids
  • The thylakoid is the structural unit of
    photosynthesis. Both photosynthetic prokaryotes
    and eukaryotes have these flattened sacs/vesicles
    containing chlorophyll

6
The Light Reaction
  • Take place in the thylakoid membranes, convert
    light energy to the chemical energy of ATP and
    NADPH.
  • The light reactions use the reactant water from
    the equation and release the product oxygen.

7
Calvin Cycle
  • Like a sugar factory within a chloroplast.
  • It is called a cycle because the starting
    material is regenerated each time the process
    occurs.
  • The starting material that gets regenerated is a
    compound called RuBP, a sugar with five carbons

8
Inputs and Outputs(Reactant and Products)
  • With each turn of the Calvin cycle, there are
    chemical inputs and outputs.
  • The inputs are carbon dioxide from the air and
    the ATP and NADPH produced by the light
    reactions.

9
Calvin Cycle Inputs
  • The Calvin cycle uses carbon from the carbon
    dioxide, energy from the ATP, and high-energy
    electrons and hydrogen ions from the NADPH.

10
Calvin Cycle Outputs
  • Is an energy-rich sugar molecule. That sugar is
    not yet glucose, but a smaller sugar named G3P.
  • The plant cell uses G3P as the raw material to
    make glucose and other organic molecules it
    needs.

11
Summary of Photosynthesis
  • Recall that the overall equation for
    photosynthesis is
  • 6 CO2 6 H2O C6H12O6 6 O2

12
The Calvin cycle
  • Takes place in the stroma
  • Uses ATP and NADPH to convert carbon dioxide to
    sugar

13
Flow of Energy
  • By converting light energy to chemical energy,
    photosynthesis is the first step in the flow of
    energy through an ecosystem.

14
Some of that chemical energy then passes from
producers to consumers. Even when people eat
meat, you can trace its stored energy back to
photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is the ultimate
source of all the food you eat and all the oxygen
you breathe.
15
  • The nature of light
  • The energy produced by the sun reaches the earth
    as electromagnetic radiation.
  • Light and other forms of electromagnetic
    radiation are considered to have both a wave
    nature and a particle nature.

16
  • Particles or packets of light (its particle
    nature) are known as photons - the smallest
    divisible units of light.
  • The distance moved by a photon during one of it
    vibrations is referred to as its wavelength and
    is measured in nanometers (nm).

17
Visible light
  • A very small part of this spectrum can be seen by
    the human eye i.e. between the wavelengths 400
    and 700 nm.
  • This part of the electromagnetic spectrum is
    called visible light.
  • Almost all life depends ultimately on this part
    of the spectrum for its energy.

18
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19
Why plants only use visible light as a source of
energy for photosynthesis
  • Visible light
  • Each photon of visible light contains just enough
    energy to excite the electrons of molecules
    without causing damage to the cell.

20
Light and photosynthesis
  • Chlorophyll absorbs blue-violet and red-orange
  • Reflects green back
  • Chlorophyll a, the most important light-absorbing
    pigment in plants, does not absorb light in the
    green part of the spectrum.  Light in this range
    of wavelengths is reflected.

21
Light and photosynthesis
  • Plants do not depend only on chlorophyll a but
    also have other pigments (accessory pigments)
    which absorb light of  different wavelengths.
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