Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis is the process by which chlorophyll - containing organisms
- such
as green plants, algae, and some bacteria - capture energy from light
and
convert it to chemical energy. For the process of photosynthesis to take
place
the organism must contain chloroplasts. Chlorophyll is responsible for
the green
color in plants and is also responsible for their ability to
photosynthesize.
Photosynthesis is usually carried out in the leaves of
green plants, but it can
also take place in other parts of the plant such as
the stem. The balanced
chemical equation for photosynthesis is: Sunlight +
6CO2 + H2O --yields-C6H12O6
+ 6O2 The purpose of this lab is to answer the
question, "Is sunlight
required for photosynthesis?" III.) Experimental
Design / Materials and
Methods The first experiment was called
"Separating Plant Pigments."
In this first experiment the materials that
you need are a piece of green plant
(collard greens), a piece of
chromatography paper, solvent, and a test tube. The
first thing you do is
take your green plant and fold it up tightly. Second, you
lay the plant on
the chromatography paper and smash parts of the plant onto the
paper. Next
you mark the outside of the tube with a wax pencil where the bottom
of the
pigments are. Then we take the paper back out of the tube and add the
solvent
to the bottom of the test tube. Next we have to wait fifteen to
twenty
minutes for the see what will happen to the paper. The purpose of
this
experiment is to see how many different pigments will separate from the
green
plants. The second experiment was called "Detecting Carbon
Dioxide
Absorption in Green Plants." In the second experiment that was
conducted
the materials needed are three large test tubes, some Elodea
plants, bromthymol
blue solution, and a piece of tin foil. The first thing
you do is place pieces
of the Elodea plant in two of the test tubes. Second
you add the bromthymol blue
solution, which is a carbon dioxide indicator, to
the test tube nearly to the
top. The third tube is filled with bromthymol
blue solution and is used as a
control so that you can compare color change.
Next you wrap one of the Elodea
containing tubes in tin foil so that it does
not receive sunlight. The other
Elodea containing tube should be placed
in the light. All should remain this way
for a twenty-four hour period. The
purpose of this experiment is to detect when
carbon dioxide is released or
gained. The third experiment is called
"Detecting Starch in Leaves." Starch
is not a result of
photosynthesis, but we think that it came from sugars
produced during
photosynthesis. The materials needed for this experiment are
a hot plate, two
small beakers, water, ethanol, a leaf from a Coleus plant
exposed to light; a
light deprived plant, and an iodine solution. The first
thing you do is boiling
the light exposed leaf in water for one minute. Next
you boil the same leaf in
ethanol for one minute or until the leaf has turned
white. Take the leaf out of
the ethanol and place it on a small petri dish
and soak it in the iodine
solution. If the plant contains starch the color of
the iodine will change from
a rusty red color to a dark purple or black. Next
you take the light deprived
plant and boil it for one minute in water. Take
it out of the water and place it
in the ethanol solution and boil it for one
minute. Take the leaf out of the
ethanol and place it on a small petri dish
and cover it in iodine. The purpose
if this experiment is to detect starch in
green plants. IV.) Results In the
first lab that was conducted our results
came out positive that light is
required for photosynthesis to occur. In this
experiment I had three color
pigments to separate out on to the
chromatography paper. Photosynthesis was
present in these because the
pigments contained chlorophyll a, which plays an
important part in
photosynthesis. The other pigments contained carotene and
xanthrophylls,
which are both present in photosynthesis. In the second
experiment we used
Elodea plants and a carbon dioxide detecting solvent to see
when carbon
dioxide is released or gained. In the first tube with the Elodea
wrapped in
tin foil, so that it could not receive light, the plant gained carbon
dioxide
during aerobic cellular respiration and turned the solvent yellow. In
the
control tube the solvent remained the same color because carbon dioxide
was
not gained or released. In the tube that was kept under the light carbon
dioxide
was lost and the color changed to a dark blue. This release of carbon
dioxide
under light proves that light is required from photosynthesis. The
third
experiment that we conducted was to see if starch was found in the
leaves of
green plants. In the plant that was exposed to light starch was
found. This
proves that photosynthesis was taking place because the plant was
producing
sugar. In the plant that was deprived of light there was no starch
found which
proved that photosynthesis did not occur. The plant had to use
its stored starch
as a source of food. V.) Discussion My interpretation of
all these experiments
is that yes some type of light energy is required for
photosynthesis to occur.
In every experiment conducted photosynthesis was
present when there was light.
In the experiments where light was not
present the plant was not producing food
or carbon dioxide. In conclusion
these experiments prove to me that some type of
light is required for
photosynthesis. If there is no source of light the plant
had to use its
stored food to survive. Without light the plant could not survive
very long
after it had used all of its stored food and energy.