Topic 6: Photoysnthesis Flashcards

1
Q

What is photosynthesis?

A

A series of enzyme catalysed chemical reactions carried out in the chloroplast. Carbon dioxide combine/react to form glucose. The process requires energy transferred by light.

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2
Q

What type of reaction is photosynthesis?

A

Endothermic reaction.

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3
Q

How to animals get energy from plants when they eat them?

A

Glucose and substances made from glucose during photosynthesis are stores of energy. When animals eat plants they get their energy from these stores.

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4
Q

What does biomass mean?

A

The materials on an organism.

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5
Q

Why are plants and algae producers in food chains?

A

Because they produce their own biomass and so produce the food for all other life on Earth.

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6
Q

What is the word equation for photosynthesis?

A

Water + carbon dioxide ➡️ glucose + water

(Energy transferred by light)

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7
Q

Where does photosynthesis occur and why?

A

Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast because the chloroplast contains chlorophyll which absorbs light for photosynthesis to occur.

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8
Q

What is an endothermic reaction?

A

A reaction where energy from the surroundings is transferred to the products.

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9
Q

Why is photosynthesis an endothermic reaction?

A

The products of photosynthesis have more energy than the reactants so it is therefore endothermic.

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10
Q

What does the glucose from photosynthesis form?

A

The glucose molecules formed, link together to form a polymer called starch. This stays in the chloroplasts until photosynthesis stops. The starch is then broken down into simpler substances, which are then moved into the cytoplasm to make sucrose (another type of sugar). This is then transported around plant.

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11
Q

What can sucrose be used for in plants?

A
  • starch(in a storage organ such as a potato)
  • other molecules for the plants such as, cellulose, lipids pr proteins
  • glucose for respiration (to release energy)
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12
Q

How are leaves adapted?

A
  • leaves are broad and flat giving them a large surface area to absorb sunlight.
  • palisade cell’s are near the top of the cell and are packed with chloroplast. Both these factors allow the leaf to absorb a great deal of sunlight.
  • leaves are thin so the carbon dioxide doesn’t have to diffuse far.
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13
Q

What is the stomata?

A

Leaves contain microscopic pores called the stomata (singular stoma). Stomata allow carbon dioxide to diffuse into leaf. Stomata are opened and closed by specialised guard cells.

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14
Q

How are guard cells adapted?

A

Th stomata are opened and closed by specialised guard cells. In the light, water flows into pairs of guard cells making them rigid. This opens the stomata so carbon dioxide can flow through for photosynthesis to occur. In the dark, in the night water flows out of the guard cells, causing them to loose their rigidity, shutting the the stomata.

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15
Q

How does the stomata cause gas exchange?

A

Stomata allows oxygen and water vapour to escape into the air. Carbon dioxide flows into the stomata. The flow of different gases into and out of the stomata is an example of gas exchange.

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16
Q

Why is it harder for plants to photosynthesise at the top of a mountain and easier nearer the sea?

A

There are fewer molecules in each cubic centimetre of air at the top of a mountain than at the bottom. This reduced concentration of air molecules causes a lower rate of photosynthesis in high mountains compared to by the sea.
Also the reaction is catalysed by enzymes that work better at warmer temperatures.

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17
Q

How is photosynthesis catalysed and why?

A

The reaction is catalysed by enzymes that work better at higher temperatures. This is another reason why photosynthesis at the top of mountains is slower than at the bottom because it’s colder at the top.

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18
Q

What is a meant by a limiting factor?

A

A single factor that when in short supply can limit the rate of a process, such as photosynthesis.

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19
Q

What are the limiting factors in photosynthesis and how does this affect the rate of photosynthesis?

A

One of:

  • carbon dioxide concentration.
  • water
  • light intensity
  • temperature

The maximum rate of photosynthesis is controlled by the factor in shortest supply - therefore this is the limiting factor.

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20
Q

What is the inverse square law and what is the equation to work out new light intensity?

A

To calculate a new light intensity (I new) when the distance of the light source changes we use:

I new = I original x d squared original / d squared new

D is distance. I new is inversely proportional to d squared new (light intensity is inversely proportional to the new distance squared) light intensity varies with distance according to the inverse square law.

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21
Q

How are buttress roots adapted to the rainforest?

A

Some trees are adapted to the rainforest by having huge buttress roots. Like all roots they absorb water and minerals from the soil. However they also help the tall trees from falling over in thin rainforest soil, by acting as props. They also trap leaves and other dead vegetation, which rot to provide additional nutrients to the tree.

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22
Q

The water absorbed by plant roots are used for:

A
  • carrying dissolved minerals
  • keeping cells rigid (otherwise plants wilt- their leaves and stems droop)
  • cooling the leaves (when water evaporates from them).
  • photosynthesis
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23
Q

How are root hair cells adapted to carry out their function?

A
  • The hairs are extensions to the root to absorb lots of water and mineral ions very quickly by providing a large surface area.
  • the ‘hairs’ also have very thin cell walls so that the flow of water into cells is not slowed down.
  • water enters by osmosis and diffusion.
  • tiny tubes join the cytoplasm of some cells together allowing water to diffuse.
  • mitochondria needed for active transport.
  • no chloroplast as they do not need sunlight as they are underground meaning more space for more useful parts.
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24
Q

What is a concentration gradient?

A

The difference between 2 concentrations. There will be an overall movement of particles down a concentration gradient from a higher concentration to lower a concentration.

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25
Q

Why do particles in a liquid/fluid move down a concentration gradient?

A

Particles constantly move in random directions so particles in a fluid spread down a concentration gradient. This is diffusion.

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26
Q

How does water diffuse in plant root cells?

A

Inside plant roots, the cell walls have an open structure allowing water particles to diffuse towards the middle of the root. (From where the are more of them to where there are fewer.)

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27
Q

What is osmosis?

A

When solvent molecules (such as water) diffuse through a semi permeable membrane. They diffuse from where there are more of them (a dilute solution of solutes) to where there are fewer (a more concentrated solution).

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28
Q

What is diffusion?

A

The random movement and spreading of particles. There is a net movement of particles from a high concentration to a low concentration.

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29
Q

Can a solvent pass through a cell membrane by osmosis in a root hair cell?

A

Yes because cell membranes are semi permeable and so water can pass through to the cytoplasm of root hair cells by osmosis.

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30
Q

Why do plants need mineral salts?

A

Mineral salts are naturally occurring ionic compounds. Plants need ions from these compounds to make produce new substances. For example plants need nitrate ions to produce proteins.

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31
Q

What are mineral salts?

A

Naturally occurring ionic compounds that plants need to create new substances in order to survive.

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32
Q

Why do mineral ions move into cells via active transport?

A

The concentrations of ions in a root hair cell is greater than in the soil. Mineral ions cannot diffuse against this concentration gradient so proteins in the cell membrane pump the ions into the cell.

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33
Q

What is transpiration and why is it essential for plants?

A

This is the flow of water into a root, up the stem and out of the leaves. The water then evaporated from the leaf and this keeps the plant cool and helps the water and mineral ions move up the plant.

34
Q

What is a xylem vessel?

A

A long thick- walled tube found in plants, formed from many dead xylem cells. The vessels carry water and dissolved mineral salts through the plant.

35
Q

How does a xylem vessel carry out its function?

A
  • form tiny continuous pipes leading from a plants roots up into its leaves.
  • inside the vessels there is an unbroken chain of water, due to the weak forces of attraction between water molecules.
  • water molecules are pulled up the xylem vessels in the stem as water evaporates from the xylem vessels in the leaves.
  • as water diffuses out the leaf more water evaporates from the xylem inside the leaf.
36
Q

How do we affect factors affecting transpiration?

A

We can affect factors affecting transpiration using a potometer. The air bubble moves along the tube as the plant looses water. The speed of the bubble gives a measure of the rate of transpiration. (mm/min)

Do this by measuring the distance of tube and time it takes to find out speed, speed = distance/time

37
Q

Why do water molecules diffuse down a concentration gradient inside a leaf?

A

The concentration of water vapour in the air spaces inside a leaf is greater than outside the leaf. So water molecules diffuse down a concentration gradient, out of the leaf. A bigger difference between the concentration makes the gradients steeper, which makes diffusion faster.

38
Q

How would a bigger difference in concentrations affect the concentration gradient and rate of diffusion?

A

A bigger concentration means a steeper concentration gradient, which means a faster rate of diffusion.

39
Q

Any factor that reduces the concentration of water molecules outside the stomata will increase transpiration. Factors that increase transpiration include:

A

Wind- moves water particles away from stomata
Low humidity- little water evaporates in the air
Higher temperatures- particles move faster so diffuse faster
Greater light intensity- makes stomata wider

40
Q

Why do xylem vessels die?

A

When xylem vessels develop they die and the top and bottom of their cell disintegrates. This creates long empty vessels through which water can move easily.

41
Q

Why are xylem vessels rigid?

A

Because they have thick side walls and rings of hard lignin, and so water pressure inside the vessels does not burst or collapse them. The rigid xylem vessels also help to support the plants.

42
Q

What do plants make sucrose from?

A

Glucose and starch from photosynthesis.

43
Q

What is the phloem?

A

Living tissue formed of sieve tubes and companion cells that transport sugars, sucrose, and other compounds round the plant.

44
Q

What are sieve tubes and what is their purpose/role?

A

Formed of plant phloem sieve cells. The cells have tiny holes in their ends. The tubes carry sugar and other compounds around the plant.

45
Q

What are companion cells and what are their purpose/role?

A

These are specialised cells located in the phloem. They actively pump sucrose into or out of sieve cells that form the sieve tubes. As sucrose is pumped into sieve tunes (in a leaf), the increased pressure causes the sucrose solution to flow up to growing shoots of down to storage organs.

46
Q

What is the fund tips of the phloem and how does it work?

A
  • plants make sucrose from glucose and starch both made by photosynthesis. (Glucose is stored by the plant as starch)
  • sucrose is translocated in the sieve tubes if the phloem tissue. The large central channel in each sieve cell is connected to its neighbours, by through the solution flows.
47
Q

What is translocation?

A

The transport of sugars (mainly sucrose)and other compounds in the phloem tissue of the plant.

48
Q

How are xylem cells adapted?

A
  • thick side walls and rigid rings of lignin form rigid tubes that will not burst or collapse and that provide support.
  • tiny pores allow water and mineral ions to enter and leave the xylem vessel.
  • the dead cells have no cytoplasm and so an empty tube in which water can flow continuously through. When the cells die the tops and bottoms of the cells also disintegrated so they can form one long empty tube for water to flow through.
  • the lack of cell walls between cells mean that water flow is not slowed down.
49
Q

How is phloem tissue adapted?

A
  • holes in the end of cell walls allow liquids to flow from one sieve cell into the next.
  • they have very small amount of cytoplasm (and no nucleus) which means there is more room for a central channel.
  • pores between sieve and companion cells which sucrose solution can be pumped through.
  • companion cells contain many mitochondria so they can actively pump sucrose solution into to sieve cells. They also contain a vacuole.
50
Q

Why do some leaves have large surface areas?

A

In order to collect as much sunlight as possible.

51
Q

How is sunlight collected in leaves?

A

Chlorophyll, located in the chloroplast of plant cells absorb the sunlight needed for photosynthesis. The chlorophyll is pact into discs inside chloroplast. This energy is transferred to glucose in photosynthesis.

52
Q

Why can the chloroplast in plant cells move?

A

Chloroplast can move towards light or away from it (as protection form damage by very bright light).

53
Q

Why are the irregular shoes spongy cells adapted well to aid gas exchange?

A

The spongy cell’s do not fit together well and therefore create air spaces, allowing gases to diffuse easily inside a leaf. A network of xylem vessels supply the water for photosynthesis.

54
Q

How does carbon dioxide diffuse into to the leaf?

A

Through the stomata.

55
Q

What are epidermis cells and how are they adapted?

A

They form the outer layer of the leaf, holding the leaf together and protecting the cells inside.

  • they are transparent allowing light to pass through to be absorbed by chlorophyll for photosynthesis.
  • they produce a waterproof waxy cuticle, which helps to prevent water loss. It also helps to stop microbes entering the leaf.
56
Q

What are palisade cells?

A

They are tall columns-shaped cells near the upper surface of a plant leaf.

57
Q

What is meant by cuticle?

A

An outer covering that is not made of cells. Plant leaves have a cuticle covering their leaves.

58
Q

How are some plants adapted?

A
  • deciduous trees lose their leaves in the winter to prevent water loss when the soil may be frozen.
  • conifers (pine trees) have needle shaped leaves with a smaller surface area and a very thick cuticle. This shape creates less wind resistance than broad leaves. This allows them to stand high winds and collect less snow in the winter.
59
Q

How can plants reduce water loss and how do conifers do this?

A

Some plants reduce water loss but trapping water vapour close to their leaves, which slows the rate of diffusion out of their leaf. Conifers achieve this by having the stomata the stomata located in small pits, where water vapour collects because it is less exposed to air movement. Other plants use tiny hairs to trap water vapour.

60
Q

How is a cactus adapted to desert conditions?

A
  • thick cuticle
  • stem stores water
  • spines/spikes instead of leaves, minimise the surface area of the plant and protect it from herbivores/predators.
  • cacti stomata only open at night. Carbon dioxide is taken in and stored to use during the day for photosynthesis.
  • in some species the stomata is only found in the ‘valley’ of stems.
61
Q

What is a stimulus?

A

A stimulus is a change in environment that causes a response by an organism.

62
Q

What is a tropism?

A

Responding to a stimulus by growing towards or away from it.

63
Q

What is phototropism?

A

Growth in response to the stimulus of light.

64
Q

What is a positive tropism?

A

Tropism towards a stimulus.

65
Q

Why are plant shoots positively phototropic?

A

Plant shoots have a positively phototropism because they need to grow towards light for photosynthesis. Plant roots have a negative phototropism because they grow downwards way from light.

66
Q

What is a positive phototropism caused by?

A

Plants respond to stimuli using plant hormones. Positive phototropism is caused by plant hormones called auxins.

67
Q

What are auxins and what are their function in a plant?

A

Auxins are produced in the tips of shoots, where they cause elongation of the cells. If the shoot is grown with light coming from only one direction, then auxins move to the shaded side of the shoot. This makes the cells on the shaded side elongate more, which in turn causes the causes the shoot to grow towards the light.

68
Q

What do auxins do?

A

They control the growth of plant shoots towards light.

69
Q

What is gravitropism?

A

A growth response to the stimuli of gravity.

70
Q

What affect do auxins have in the root tips of a plant?

A

Auxins are also found in root tips, where they have the opposite affect to that in shoots. In roots, auxins cause cells to stop elongation. This causes positive gravitropism - growth towards the direction of gravity. This helps anchor the plants in place and helps the roots reach moisture underground.

71
Q

What does the plant hormone gibberellins do?

A

Helps seeds to germinate and start to grow.

72
Q

What does the plant hormone ethene do?

A

Ethene has is a plant hormone that helps fruits ripen.

73
Q

What is the disadvantage of artificial auxins?

A

Can make some plants grow uncontrollably, which can kill them.

74
Q

What do selective weed killers contain and what do they do?

A

They contain artificial auxins to kill plants with broad leaves e.g dandelions chickweed. But those with narrow leaves e.g grass and wheat are not affected. Farmers can therefore kill weeds in a wheat field without affecting the crop.

75
Q

How do auxins found in root powders work and what are the Ada vantages of using them?

A

The auxins cause plant cuttings to develop roots quickly. Large numbers of identical plants can be produced this way, quickly using cuttings, compared to growing plants from seeds.

76
Q

What is meant by photoperiodism?

A

The response of an organism to the number of daylight hours in a day.

77
Q

How do some plants use photoperiodism?

A

Some plants use this to flower at a certain time (e.g when suitable pollinators are around or when it’s not too cold.) Flower growers can override photoperiodism by spraying the plant with gibberellins.

78
Q

What are some of the advantages of using the hormone gibberellin?

A

Many plants often only produce seeds after being pollinated, which them allows the egg cell to be fertilised and seeds to form. Gibberellins can cause some plants to produce fruit without this, giving us seedless fruit. It can also be sprayed on some plants to make them produce bigger fruits.

79
Q

What is the hormone gibberellin?

A

This is a plant hormone that is naturally released inside a seed to start germination. Some seeds need a period of darkness or cold before they can germinate but plant growers can use gibberellins to make these seeds germinate without this.

80
Q

Why do shop owners use ethene to ripen fruit?

A

In ripe fruits are easier to transport than ripe fruits without them being damaged. The unripe fruit can also be kept for longer in cold storage without going off. Fruit produces therefore often pick unripened fruit and then ripen it when needed using the gas hormone ethene. This makes sure the fruit reaches the shops in a just ripened condition.