Biology
Biology
Biology
1.1
In photosynthesis plants use
● Water, which they get from the soil
● Carbon dioxide, which they get from the air
● Energy, which they get from sunlight
1.2
Photosynthesis provides energy, in the form of chemical energy from nutrients.
Plants use sunlight to make glucose and other carbohydrates
These carbohydrates contain some energy that originally was from the sunlight.
Not all plant cells can photosynthesis since not all cells have chloroplast
Plants store carbohydrates as starch
They store the starch inside the chloroplasts in their cells.
A way you can check if a plant is photosynthesizing or not is to test for starch
Inside a leaf
Photosynthesis happens inside chloroplasts which are inside some parts of the cell in leaves
Chloroplasts are mostly inside the cells in the middle layer of the leaf, Leaves are very thin
so it is easy for sunlight to reach these cells.
Chloroplasts need lots of water and carbon dioxide
Waxy layer: stops cells from drying out
Upper epidermis: Protects the cells inside the leaf
The palisade layer: contains cells that do most of the photosynthesis
Vein: carries water to the cells in the leaf
Lower epidermis: protects the cells inside the leaf
Stoma: A tiny hole in the lower epidermis these holes let carbon dioxide in the air to get
inside the leaf
The spongy layer: has lots of air space. The cells in the spongy later do a small amount of
photosynthesis.
Magnesium is needed to make the green pigment. If a plant does not have enough
magnesium, its leaves look yellow instead of green and the plant do not grow very well.
Nitrate contains nitrogen atoms. These are needed so that the plant can convert
carbohydrates into proteins. Proteins are needed to make new cells so that the plant can
grow more normally
Plants use carbon dioxide from the air and use it in photosynthesis to make carbohydrates.
Greenhouse gas
Carbon dioxide and methane are greenhouse gases.
Carbon dioxide helps to keep the earth warm.
Without carbon dioxide, Earth would be frozen
It takes a long time to form fossil fuels and they can stay buried in the ground for millions of
years. We release carbon from fossil fuels into the air as carbon dioxide
Ice age
About 2 billion years ago Earth had its first ice age and since then Earth has cycled between
relatively warm periods and relatively cold periods and there was no ice at all even at the
poles. But in colder periods there was ice in the poles.
Snowball Earth
About 650 million years ago the whole earth was covered with ice and snow and scientists
called this snowball earth or slushball earth.
The collision affected the whole planet since it threw large quantities of rock and dust into
the air and it also would’ve created a tsunami which would;ve spread all across Earth’s
oceans.
The mean temperatures in Earth are increasing and this is caused bu an increase in Carbon
dioxide concentration in the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that traps heat
energy close to the Earth’s surface. When carbon dioxide concentrations increase more heat
is trapped.
Unit 4
4.1
Water moves into the root hair cell from the soil. It passes through the cell wall and the cell
membrane of the cell and into the cytoplasm.
Mineral ions such as nitrate ions and magnesium ions are dissolved in the water between
the soil particles.
After water has been absorbed into a root hair cell. It moves from the outside of the root
toward the inside. It foes into the xylem vessels in the center of the root.
Xylem vessels are long, tube-like cells. They are dead cells. All their contents such as
cytoplasm and a nucleus have disappeared and all that is left is their cell walls and an empty
space inside.
XV stack on top of each other to make long empty tubes that reach from the roots to the
highest parts of a plant.
4.2