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IGCSE

Biology

4.2 Plant nutrition

Define photosynthesis as the fundamental process by which plants


manufacture carbohydrates from raw materials using energy from
light.
Plants use water from the soil, carbon dioxide from the air and energy from
sunlight to make carbohydrates & oxygen.

Green plants absorb light energy using chlorophyll in their leaves.


They use it to react carbon dioxide with water to make a sugar called glucose.
The glucose is used in respiration, or converted into starch and stored.
Oxygen is produced as a by-product.

Explain that chlorophyll traps light energy and converts it into chemical
energy for the formation of carbohydrates and their subsequent
storage.
Chloroplasts turn some of the sugar they make into starch, as this is a good
way to store it.
Starch is not soluble in water, and must be converted into other substances
before it can be translocated.

State the word equation for the production of simple sugars and oxygen.
carbon dioxide + light energy ( in the presence
of chlorophyll )

glucose + oxygen

State the balanced equation for photosynthesis in symbols


6CO2 + 6H2O light (chlorophyll )

C6H12O6 + 6O2

Investigate the necessity for chlorophyll, light and carbon dioxide for
photosynthesis, using appropriate controls.
Without enough light, a plant cannot photosynthesise very quickly, even if
there is plenty of water and carbon dioxide.

chlorophyll
Photosynthesis occurs in chloroplasts.
Chloroplasts are located in the palisade mesophyll tissue of leaves.
Chlorophyll is the pigment that absorbs light energy that is used for
photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts can move around inside cells.
Chloroplasts need a good supply of water, carbon dioxide and sunlight in order
to carry out photosynthesis efficiently.

chloroplasts as seen
through a microscope

a leaf section as seen through a microscope


chlorophyll

A variegated plant is used to test for the relationship between the green
pigment in plants & starch production.

1. A destarched variegated plant was left in the sunlight for four hours.
2. A leaf is removed and tested for starch.
The green parts of the leaf contain starch.
The white do not.
3. This suggests that chlorophyll is needed for starch production.

light
A leaf usually has a large surface area, so that it can absorb a lot of light.
Its top surface is protected from water loss, disease and weather damage by
a waxy layer.
The upper part of the leaf is where the light falls, and it contains a type of
cell called a palisade cell.
This is adapted to absorb a lot of light.
It has lots of chloroplasts and is shaped like a tall box.

Testing a leaf for starch.

If you want to see if starch has been produced in a plant, you have to start
with a plant that does not have starch.
1. Test the plant for starch.
2. Place the plant in the dark for 2 or 3 days.
3. Test again for starch.

Using iodine to test for the presence of starch.


Iodine solution ( an amber colored liquid ) turns dark ( blue/black ) in the
presence of starch.
If leaves are to be tested for the presence of starch, the cell walls in the
leaf must be broken, and the chlorophyll removed.
The cell walls must be broken because to make it easier for substances to
leave or enter the cell.
The chlorophyll must be removed so that the color change in the iodine can be
seen.

light
Showing how light is needed to make starch.
1. Two leaves of a de-starched plant are to be tested for the presence of
starch.
2. One is completely covered with aluminum foil, the other with clear plastic
wrap.
3. The plant is put in the sun for 4 hours, and both leaves are tested for
starch.
The leaf in the plastic contains starch.
The leaf in the foil does not.

This suggests that light is needed for the production of starch.


carbon dioxide

Sometimes photosynthesis is limited by the concentration of carbon dioxide


in the air.
Even if there is plenty of light, a plant cannot photosynthesize if there is
insufficient carbon dioxide.

Investigate and state the effect of varying light intensity on the rate
of photosynthesis (e.g. in submerged aquatic plants).
Increasing the light intensity will boost the speed of photosynthesis.

However, once the light intensity has reached a certain level, giving the plant
more light has no effect. The extra light cannot be used for
photosynthesis because the plant is photosynthesizing as fast as it can.
Describe the intake of carbon dioxide and water by plants.

intake of carbon dioxide


Plants get carbon dioxide from the air through their leaves.
Only about 0.04% of the atmosphere consists of carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide molecules diffuse through the stomata, through the air spaces
between the spongy mesophyll cells, through the cell walls, cell
membranes and cytoplasm of the spongy and palisade cells and into the
chloroplasts.

The carbon dioxide diffuses through small holes in the underside of the leaf
called stomata. (One of these holes is called a stoma. The plural is stomata.)
The lower part of the leaf has loose-fitting cells, to allow carbon dioxide to
reach the other cells in the leaf.
This also allow the oxygen produced in photosynthesis to leave the leaf easily.

intake of water

Plants need water:


to help keep cells turgid, so that soft parts of the plant ( petals &
leaves ) are held in shape.
to be used as a solvent; substances need to be dissolved in water inside
cells so that metabolic reactions can take place.
for photosynthesis
Plants get their water from the soil.
Water is taken up by root hairs and moves across the root into the xylem.
In the xylem it flows up through the root and stem into the leaves.
Inside the leaf, the water moves out of the xylem vessels, and some of it
goes into the chloroplasts in the mesophyll cells.
Most of the water turns to water vapor and evaporates.
The water passes through the leaf and out the stomata in a process called
transpiration.
The movement of water along this pathway ( from soil to the atmosphere ) is
called the transpiration stream.

Plants get the water they need for


photosynthesis through their roots.
The roots have a type of cell called a root hair
cell - these project out from the root into
the soil.
root
hairs
Roots have a big surface area and thin walls,
which allow water to pass into them easily
by osmosis.

Corn root with root hairs for uptake of


water & nutrients from the soil.

Note that root cells do not contain chloroplasts, as they are normally in the dark and
cannot photosynthesize.

The water absorbed by the root hair cells passes through the plant in xylem
tubes, and eventually reaches the leaves.
If a plant does not absorb enough water, it will wilt or go floppy.
Without water it may also not photosynthesise quickly enough, and it may die .

Turgid plant that's watered regularly & a flaccid plant without enough water.

Identify and label the cuticle, cellular and tissue structure of a


dicotyledonous leaf, as seen in cross-section under the light
microscope and describe the significance of the features of a leaf
in
terms of functions, to include:

distribution of chloroplasts photosynthesis,

stomata and mesophyll cells gas exchange

vascular bundles (xylem and phloem) transport and support.


name of
tissue

how these structures help it perform


its function more efficiently

function

palisade
mesophyll

packed with chloroplasts ( contain chlorophyll);


regular shaped, closely packed cells
form continuous layer for efficient absorption of
sunlight

photosynthesis

spongy
mesophyll
cells

irregular shaped, loosely arranged cells


provides large surface area
for efficient gas exchange

gas exchange

vascular
bundles

phloem live cells


xylem dead cells
arranged end-to-end
hollow
walls contain lignin
no cytoplasm, cell membrane, nucleus

phloem
transport glucose
xylem transport
of water,
dissolved
minerals;
support

Describe the importance of:


nitrate ions for protein synthesis,
magnesium ions for chlorophyll synthesis.

vascular
bundle

Explain the effects of nitrate ion and magnesium ion deficiency on plant
growth.

Plants need to take in a number of elements to stay alive.


The

most important are:


carbon
hydrogen
oxygen

Plants get hydrogen and oxygen from water in the soil, and carbon and oxygen
from carbon dioxide and oxygen in the atmosphere.
Water and carbon dioxide are used to synthesize food during photosynthesis.
Oxygen is used to release energy from food during respiration.
In addition to these three elements, plants need a number of minerals for
healthy growth.
These are absorbed through the roots as mineral ions dissolved in the soil
water.
Two important mineral ions needed by plants are:
nitrate - for making amino acids, which are needed to make proteins
magnesium - for making chlorophyll
If a plant does not get enough minerals, its growth will be poor.
It will suffer from deficiency symptoms:
deficient in nitrate - it will suffer from stunted growth
deficient in magnesium - it's leaves will turn yellow

TOMATO PLANT
Nitrogen deficiency

TOMATO PLANT
Magnesium deficiency

Describe the uses, & the dangers of overuse, of nitrogen-containing


fertilizers.
As crops grow they remove nutrients, such as compounds of nitrogen,
potassium and phosphorus, from the soil.
These crops are harvested & taken away from the fields where they were
grown.
If this process is repeated for a number of years the supply of nutrients in
the soil is exhausted.
The land becomes less fertile, so plants grow poorly & produce only a small
yield.
Farmers use fertilizers to put back into the soil the nutrients that have been
removed by growing crops.
Fertilizers are chemicals used by farmers to help their crops grow well.
Rain can wash fertilizers off the fields and into rivers.
This causes water plants to overgrow and block out the light.
Other plants die as a result.
They use up oxygen as they rot away, and fish and other animals suffocate.
This process is called eutrophication.

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