ap bio ch. 10 c3 c4 and cam plants

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Photosynthesis Alternative methods of carbon fixation in hot, arid climates

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Page 1: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

PhotosynthesisPhotosynthesis

Alternative methods of carbon fixation in hot, arid climates

Alternative methods of carbon fixation in hot, arid climates

Page 2: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

You may want to set up your notes like this

C3 Plants C4 Plants CAM Plants

Page 3: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Plant evolutionary history

Life began in water

The first plants were aquatic

Since plants evolved to living out of water, they have had a hard time dealing with dehydration

Page 4: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Plant adaptations

Most adaptations involve some sort of trade off

For plants, the trade off with photosynthesis is that they lose water to the environment through transpiration

Page 5: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

A little plant anatomyThe openings on leaves are called stomataThe openings on leaves are called stomataThis is where CO2 and O2 can enter and exit

the plantWater is also lost through the stomataPlants often close the stomata on very hot Plants often close the stomata on very hot

days, but COdays, but CO22 intake is cut off intake is cut off

Page 6: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C3 plants

Most plantsFix carbon by Fix carbon by

attaching COattaching CO22 to RuBP to RuBP

“3” comes from the 3-carbon molecule produced after CO2 is fixed

Page 7: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C3 PlantsOn hot days, they close their stomata

part wayProduce little sugar then

Page 8: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C3 plants

As the COAs the CO22 that the plant does have that the plant does have

gets used up, rubisco will fix Ogets used up, rubisco will fix O22 and send it into the Calvin cycle instead of CO2

Page 9: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Peroxisomes & mitochondria split the new compound and release CO2

This is called photorespiration

Occurs in the light

Consumes oxygen and releases CO2

Page 10: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Photorespiration uses ATP but makes no ATP

Photorespiration makes no sugars

Photorespiration Photorespiration decreases decreases photosynthesis photosynthesis outputoutput

Page 11: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

So why would any plant do

this…Photorespiration may be Photorespiration may be an evolutionary leftoveran evolutionary leftover

In early atmosphere, with little O2, it didn’t matter if Rubisco had an affinity for O2

Today, with so much O2 in the atmosphere, it is inevitable that some O2 will be fixed instead of CO2

Page 12: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C3 Crop plants

Rice, wheat, soybeansRice, wheat, soybeansMay lose as much as 50% of the

Carbon fixed in the Calvin Cycle to photorespiration

Page 13: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

3 Things

What are 3 things you know for sure about C3 plants?

Page 14: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C4 plants

C4 plants have adaptations that allow them to minimize the effects of photorespiration

Many are tropical grasses

Page 15: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C4 plants

Have an alternate means of fixing carbon

C4 plants fix carbon out in the cytoplasm before it enters the Calvin Cycle

“4” comes from the 4-carbon compound that is formed when CO2 is fixed in C

4 plants

Page 16: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C4 plant adaptations1st step is binding CO2 to PEP

(phosphoenolpyruvate) by the enzyme PEP carboxylase to make a 4-C compound: oxaloacetate

PEP has a high affinity for CO2 and none for O2

Page 17: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

2. The 4-carbon compound enters photosynthetic cellsphotosynthetic cells

CO2 is released from PEP and the Calvin cycle continues as normal

This adaptation allows C4 plants to keep a high concentration of CO2 in the photosynthetic cells, preventing Rubisco from binding to O2 instead of CO2

Page 18: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

C4 plants thrive in hot climates where stomata will be closed often

Some important C4 plants are sugarcane, corn, tropical grasses

Page 19: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

3 Things

What are 3 things you know for sure about C4 plants?

Page 20: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

CAM plants

Another alternate method of carbon fixation

Common in succulents like cacti

Page 21: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

CAM plants

CAM plants keep stomata closed during the day to minimize water loss

Only open stomata at night

Page 22: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Closed stomata during the day means no CO2

entering the plant during the day

Page 23: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

CAM plants

When stomata are open at night, CAM plants take in CO2 and fix it by incorporating it into organic molecules

This is called crassulacean acid metabolism

Crassulaceae is the name of the family of plants that include succulents

Page 24: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

CAM plantsCells of CAM plants store

the organic molecules that CO2 was fixed to in their vacuoles until morning

Light reactions then produce ATP and NADPH to drive the Calvin Cycle

The CO2 in the organic molecules is released for use in the Calvin Cycle

Page 25: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

CAM plants

Important CAM plants include pineapple and agave

Page 26: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

3 Things

What are 3 things you know for sure about CAM plants?

Page 27: AP Bio Ch. 10 C3 c4 and cam plants

Comparison of C3, C4, and CAM plantsC3 plants C4 plants CAM plants

Most plantsTropical grasses like corn, sugarcane

Succulents, pineapple, agave

Fix carbon in Calvin cycle - attach CO2 to RuBP

Fix carbon in cytoplasm - attach CO2 to PEP

Fix carbon at night only, fix it to organic molecules

Enzyme - Rubisco Enzyme – PEP-ase Enzyme – PEP-ase

Most energy efficient method

1/2 way between these two

Best water conservation

Loses water through photorespiration

Loses less water Loses least water