Importance Of Photosynthesis

911 Words2 Pages

Photosynthesis is when alive, green plants use sunlight to produce foods into carbon dioxide and water. Jan van Helmont is an individual who discovered photosynthesis. He realized there was something happening to the plant when water was being added. Jan van Helmont realized that the plant was beginning to get bigger. By Jan van Helmont doing this experiment, photosynthesis was discovered.
The purpose of photosynthesis is so the plants can take in sunlight and chemically produce sugars. The sugars that the plant produces then break down the chemical bonds and turns it into energy for organisms to use. Photosynthesis is divided into two separate stages, light-depended reaction and light-independent reaction (Calvin Cycle).
The Process
The …show more content…

The organic compounds that’s used by plants are eventually made into the food web. Herbivores eat plant products that has all of the photosynthesis nutrients in them. Herbivores (plant-eaters) tend to be eaten by carnivores, whose bodies end up being broken down by decomposers. Figure 2: Importance of Photosynthesis to Life
Source: “Iology: Project.” Emaze. Amazing Presentations. n.d. Web. 29 Oct. 2016.
Photosynthesis is one of the most important steps in supporting life. Photosynthesis helps animal life by making oxygen as a waste product. If oxygen wasn’t produced by plants, animal metabolism wouldn’t be able to function properly and multicellular life forms would be impossible. (Reference 1).
Summary: Photosynthesis is where green plants use the energy they absorb from the sun to convert it to carbon dioxide, minerals, and water into oxygen and organic compounds. When photosynthesis occurs, water is captivated by the roots of the plant and is brought up to the leaves. Then, carbon dioxide is attained from the air that arrives to the leaves through the stomata and disperses to the cells that contain chlorophyll. Chlorophyll converts energy of light into energy that can be stored and used when needed. Humans exhale the carbon dioxide that plants need to

Open Document