how plants get their food (1)

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How Plants Get Their Food (1)

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How Plants Get Their Food (1). 2. 199.8 lb soil. 200 lb soil. In 1649, A Belgian physician, van Helmont, set up an experiment in which he planted a willow sapling, weighing 5 lb, in 200 lb of soil. How do plants get their food ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Page 2: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

How do plants get their food ?

199.8 lb soil

The soil was watered but nothing else was added. After 5 years, the tree had gained 169.2 lb in weight but the soil had lost only 2 pounds. van Helmont concluded that the tree had made 164lb of new growth from water alone.

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200 lb soil

In 1649, A Belgian physician, van Helmont, set up an experiment in which he planted a willow sapling, weighing 5 lb, in 200 lb of soil.

Page 3: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

van Helmont’s experiment was effective in showing that the plant’s food did not come from the soil.

But he had overlooked the fact that air was available to the plant as well as water.

Could it be that the plant made 164 lb of material from just air and water?

This might seem unlikely, but we now know that plants do indeed make their food using carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil.

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Page 4: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

FeedingAnimals get their food by eating plants, or other animals Carnivores eat animals Herbivores eat plants

Plants make their own food They combine carbon dioxide from the air with water and

dissolved salts from the soil Plants do NOT get their food from the soil

The first stage by which plants make food is called PHOTOSYNTHESIS

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Page 5: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Animals get their food …

by eating plants or ...

... plant products,

or (c) other animals

Plants make their food by photosynthesis

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Page 6: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Photosynthesis6

Green plants take in carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air

They take up water (H2O) from the soil

The plants combine the CO2 with the H2O tomake the sugar, glucose (C6H12O6)

6CO2 + 6H2O = C6H12O6 + 6O2

Oxygen (O2) is a by-product of this reaction

Page 7: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

C6H12O6

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

H2O

6O2

+

6 molecules of carbon dioxide combine with 6 molecules of waterto make one molecule of glucose and 6 molecules of oxygen

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Page 8: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Energy

It takes energy to make CO2 combine with H2O

This energy comes from sunlight

The energy is absorbed and used by a substance called chlorophyll

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Page 9: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

sunlight(energy)

waterwater

carbon dioxide

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Page 10: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Chlorophyll

Chlorophyll is a green coloured chemical

It is present in the leaves of green plants

The chlorophyll in the cells is packaged into tiny structures called chloroplasts

The next slide shows a diagram of leaf cells with their chloroplasts

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Page 11: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Leaf cells with chloroplasts

cell wall

nucleus

chloroplast

cytoplasm vacuole

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Page 12: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

All the reactions to combine CO2 and H2O take place in the chloroplast

sunlight

water

carbon dioxide

in the chloroplast,carbon dioxide andwater combine tomake sugar

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palisade cell of leaf

Page 13: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Cell structure of a leafThe palisade cells are in theuppermost layers of the leaf

epidermis

palisade cell ( photosynthesis)

vessel (carries water)

stoma (admits air)

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Page 14: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Carbohydrates

• Glucose is one example of a carbohydrate

• Other examples are starch, sucrose and cellulose (in cell walls)

• Carbohydrate molecules contain the elements carbon, hydrogen and oxygen

• Living organisms can easily change one carbohydrate into another

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Page 15: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

What happens to the glucose? The glucose made by the chloroplast is either (a) used to provide energy for the chemical

processes in the cell ( by respiration) (b)turned into sucrose and transported to

other parts of the plant or (c) turned into starch and stored in the cell as

starch grains In darkness the starch is changed back into

glucose and transported out of the cell

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Page 16: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

How plants get their food (2)How Plants Get Their Food (2)

Page 17: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Other Food

Glucose and starch are carbohydratesCarbohydrates can be oxidised during

respiration to produce energyPlants need more than carbohydratesThey need proteins for making new

cytoplasm and cells for growthTo make proteins plants combine glucose

with compounds of nitrogen, (nitrates)

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Page 18: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

GLUCOSE

storage e.g. starch in potato

starch

fruitsother sugars

e.g. seed germination

energy

cytoplasm

protein

cell walls

cellulose

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Page 19: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Nitrates

• Nitrates are present in the soil, dissolved in water

• The plants take up nitrates in the soil water• The nitrates are conducted through the roots

to the stem and then to the leaves• In the leaves, the nitrates and glucose are

combined to make proteins– This process is called assimilation

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Page 20: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Mineral salts

• Nitrates are not the only salts that plants need to take in from the soil.

• They need phosphates, sulphates, iron, potassium and magnesium salts.– This is the reason why farmers and gardeners

add fertilizer to the soil.

• These fertilizers usually contain nitrates, phosphates, and potassium (NPK).

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Page 21: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Effects of fertilisers

These are experimental strips of wheat. Varying amounts and types of fertiliser have been added to the soil to see which give the best plant growth

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Page 22: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Average yearly wheat yields from experimental plots

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

Kg

per

hec

tare

No manure

Farmyard manure

Chemical fertilizer

Nophosphate

No nitrate

Nomagnesium

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Page 23: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Plants combine carbon dioxide from the air, and water from the soil to make glucose.

The energy needed for this process comes from sunlight

The sunlight is absorbed by chlorophyll contained in the chloroplasts of the leaf.

The glucose can be used for energy or to make other substances.

To make other substances, the glucose must be combined with other chemical elements such as nitrogen and potassium.

These chemical elements are present in the soil and are taken up in solution by the roots.

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TO SUM UP

Page 24: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

QUESTIONS

In the questions which follow, choose the best answer from the four alternatives

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Page 25: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 1For a plant to make glucose it needs

(a) CO2 and H2O

(b) CO2, H2O and sunlight

(c) CO2, H2O, sunlight and chlorophyll

(d) CO2, H2O, sunlight, chlorophyll and nitrates

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Page 26: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 2

A by-product of photosynthesis is

(a) Water vapour

(b) Oxygen

(c) Carbon dioxide

(d) Nitrogen

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Page 27: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 3

The plant needs to take in nitrates in order to make

(a) Protein

(b) Cellulose

(c) Starch

(d) Sugars

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Page 28: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 4

Chlorophyll is present only in

(a) The cytoplasm

(b) The vacuole

(c) The cell wall

(d) The chloroplasts

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Page 29: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 5

The food made by photosynthesis is transported round the plant in the form of

(a) Glucose

(b) Sucrose

(c) Starch

(e) Cytoplasm

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Page 30: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Question 6

Which mineral ions are needed for making protein?

(a) Magnesium ions

(b) Sulphate ions

(c) Phosphate ions

(d) Nitrate ions

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Page 31: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Incorrect

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Page 32: How Plants Get Their Food (1)

Correct

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