B4b Flashcards

1
Q

What is the word equation for photosynthesis?

A

carbon dioxide + water (light energy above) arrow (chlorophyll under) glucose + oxygen

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2
Q

Which is a waste product in the reaction?

A

Oxygen

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3
Q

What is the balanced symbol equation for photosynthesis?

A

6CO2 + 6H2O arrow C6H1206 +6O2

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4
Q

What is the order in the development of the understanding of the process of photosynthesis?

A

Greek Scientists - plants gain mass from soil minerals
Van Helmont - plants gain mass by taking in water
Priestley - plants produce oxygen

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5
Q

What did Greek scientists conclude?

A

Plants gain mass from soil minerals because they observed that the only thing touching plants was soil. They couldn’t see that air also touched plants.

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6
Q

What did Van Helmont conclude?

A

He set up the following experiment:
- He dried some soil, weighed it and put it in a pot.
- He planted a willow tree weighing 2.2kg in the soil.
- He added rainwater to the pot whenever it was dry.
5 years later Van Helmont removed the tree from the pot:
- The tree weighed 76.7kg - so it had gained 74.5kg of mass.
- He dried the soil and weighed it - its mass had changed very little (about 60g less)
Van Helmont concluded that because the weight of the soil had changed so little, the tree must have gained mass from another source. Because he only added water to the tree, he concluded the tree must have gained mass by taking in water.

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7
Q

What did Priestley’s experiments show?

A

Priestley did the following experiment:
- Placed a burning candle in a sealed container and observed that the flame went out after a short time The candle couldn’t have been re - lit.
- He then placed a burning candle and a living plant in the container. The flame went out after short time, but after a few weeks the candle could be re-lit.
He decided that the burning candle used up something in the container - and that this made the flame go out. He also decided that the living plant ‘restored the air’ so the candle could burn again.
He concluded that the plants restore something to the air that burning and breathing take out. Today we know this is oxygen.

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8
Q

How have experiments using isotopes increased our understanding of photosynthesis?

A

Scientists realised that plants release oxygen during photosynthesis, but they didn’t know whether oxygen came from carbon dioxide or water (both of which contain oxygen atoms).
To find out where the oxygen came from, a scientist supplied plants with water containing an isotope of oxygen called oxygen-18. The carbon dioxide the plants receive contained ordinary carbon-16.
It was found that when the plants photosynthesised, they released oxygen-18.
This showed that the oxygen came from the water that was supplied to the plant, not the carbon dioxide.

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9
Q

What are the two stages in photosynthesis?

A

Firstly, light energy is used to split water into oxygen gas and hydrogen ions.
Carbon dioxide gas then combines with the hydrogen ions to make glucose and water.

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10
Q

What is glucose made in photosynthesis transported as?

A

Soluble sugars but stored as insoluble starch.

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11
Q

What can glucose and starch be converted into ?

A

Other substances in plants to be used for energy, growth and storage products.

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12
Q

What are the five things glucose is used for?

A
Respiration
Making cell walls
Stored in seeds
Stored as starch
Making proteins
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13
Q

What is the conversion of glucose for respiration?

A

Plants use some of the glucose for respiration. This releases energy so they can convert the rest of the glucose into various other useful substances.

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14
Q

What is the conversion of glucose into cellulose?

A

Glucose is converted into cellulose for making cell walls, especially in a rapidly growing plant.

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15
Q

What is the conversion of glucose to be stored in seeds?

A

Glucose is turned into lipids (fats and oils) for storing in seeds. Sunflower seeds, for example, contain a lot of oil - we get coking oil and margarine from them.

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16
Q

What is the conversion of glucose to be stored as starch?

A

Glucose is turned into starch and stored in roots, stems and leaves, ready for use when photosynthesis isn’t happening, like at night.

17
Q

What is the conversion of glucose into proteins?

A

Glucose is combined with nitrates (collected from the soil) to make amino acids, which are then made into proteins. These are used for growth and repair.

18
Q

Why is starch insoluble?

A

Starch is insoluble which makes it good for storing. This is because:

  • It can’t dissolve in water and move away from storage areas in solution.
  • It doesn’t affect the water concentration inside cells - soluble substances would bloat the storage cells by drawing in water.
19
Q

Why do plants grow faster in the summer?

A

Because of more light and warmth providing energy for photosynthesis.

20
Q

What are the three limiting factors?

A

Light
CO2
Temperature

21
Q

How can photosynthesis be increased by providing more light?

A

Light provides the energy needed for photosynthesis.

1) If light level is raised, the rate of photosynthesis will increase, but only up to a certain point.
2) Beyond that, it won’t make any difference because then it’ll be either the temperature or the CO2 level which is now the limiting factor.

22
Q

How can photosynthesis be increased by providing more carbon dioxide?

A

CO2 is also needed for photosynthesis.

1) As with light intensity, the amount of CO2 will only increase the rate of photosynthesis up to a point. After this the graph flattens out, showing that CO2 is no longer the limiting factor.
2) As long as light and CO2 are in plentiful supply then the factor limiting photosynthesis must be temperature.

23
Q

How can photosynthesis by increased by providing higher temperatures?

A

Photosynthesis works best when it’s warm but not too hot.

1) As the temperature increases, so does the rate of photosynthesis. But if the temperature is too high, the plant’s enzymes will be denatured, so the rate rapidly decreases.
2) This happens at about 45oC.
3) usually though, if the temperature is the limiting factor it’s because it’s too low, and things need warming up.

24
Q

What do plants carry out as well as photosynthesis?

A

Respiration

25
Q

Why do plants carry out respiration all the time?

A

Plants must respire all the time, day and night to get the energy they need to live. Whereas, photosynthesis only happens during the day.

26
Q

Why do plants take in carbon dioxide and give out oxygen during the day and do the reverse at night, in terms of both photosynthesis and respiration?

A

Photosynthesis - carbon dioxide + water = glucose + oxygen (requires energy)
Respiration - glucose + oxygen = carbon dioxide + water (energy released)

During the day, plants make more oxygen by photosynthesis than they use in respiration. So in daylight, they release oxygen and take in carbon dioxide.
At night though, plants only respire - there’s no light for photosynthesis. This means they take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide.