4.5–4.11: Photosynthesis uses energy from sunlight to make food.

Lotus water lilies reach toward the sky.
4.5: Where does plant matter come from? Photosynthesis: the big picture.

Watching a plant grow over the course of a few years can seem like watching a miracle, or at least a very subtle magic trick. Of course it’s neither, but the process is nonetheless amazing. Consider that in five years a tree can increase its weight by 150 pounds (68 kg) (FIGURE 4-9). Where does that 150 pounds of new tree come from?

Figure 4.9: When plants grow, where does the new tissue come from? From the dirt? From thin air?

Our first guess might be the soil. Could that be it? It’s easy enough to weigh the soil in a pot when first planting a tree, and then weigh it again 5 years later. After 5 years, though, we find that the soil in our planter has lost less than a pound, nowhere near enough to explain the massive increase in the amount of plant material. Perhaps the new growth comes from the water? Wrong again. Although the older and much larger tree holds more water in its many cells, the water provided to the plant does not come close to accounting for the increase in the dry weight of the plant.

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Question 4.2

When humans grow, the new tissue comes from food we eat. When plants grow, where does the new tissue come from?

The amazing truth is that most of the new material comes from an invisible gas in the air. In the process of photosynthesis, plants capture carbon dioxide gas (CO2) from the air. Using energy they get from sunlight, along with water and small amounts of chemicals usually found in soil, they produce solid, visible (and often tasty) sugars and other organic molecules that are used to make plant structures such as leaves, roots, stems, flowers, fruits, and seeds. In the process, the plants give off oxygen (O2), a by-product that happens to be necessary for much of the life on earth—including all animal life!

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Although plants are generally the most visible organisms that can capture light energy and convert it to organic matter, they are not the only organisms capable of photosynthesis. Some bacteria and many other unicellular organisms, along with kelp and other multicellular algae, are also capable of using the energy in sunlight to produce organic materials (FIGURE 4-10).

Figure 4.10: Plants aren’t the only photosynthesizers. Some bacteria and other unicellular organisms, along with kelp and other multicellular algae, are capable of photosynthesis.

There are three inputs to the process of photosynthesis (FIGURE 4-11): light energy (from the sun), carbon dioxide (from the atmosphere), and water (from the ground). From these three inputs, the plant produces sugar and oxygen. As we’ll see, photosynthesis is best understood as two separate events: a “photo” segment, during which light is captured, and a “synthesis” segment, during which sugar is built. In the “photo” reactions, light energy is captured and temporarily saved in energy-storage molecules. During this process, water molecules split and produce oxygen. In the “synthesis” reactions, the energy in the energy-storage molecules is used to assemble sugar molecules from carbon dioxide from the air.

Figure 4.11: Photosynthesis: the big picture.

TAKE-HOME MESSAGE 4.5

Through photosynthesis, plants use water, the energy of sunlight, and carbon dioxide gas from the air to produce sugars and other organic materials. In the process, photosynthesizing organisms also produce oxygen, which makes all animal life possible.

What are the three inputs for photosynthesis? What are the two outputs?

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