Plants need only two substances for photosynthesis, water and carbon dioxide. Water is absorbed from the soil (or from the water if they are acquatic plants) and carbon dioxide is absorbed from the air (or again, from the water if the plants grow underwater).
All plants receive their energy through photosynthesis.
Nutrients from its roots then it just recycles the energy it gets from photosynthesis
CO2 is obtained from the atmosphere.CO2 enters plants through stomata
Stored energy. plants are always doing photosynthesis. it gets stored for the winter.
Yes, photosynthesis does occur in plants because that is when the plants get their colour, eg. Green! Photsynthesis is when the plant gets enough nutrients and sunlight to grow the photsynthesis particles which gives the leaves their green colour.
Chlorophyll is the compound in plants that makes photosynthesis possible. It has a unique structure that allows it to lose electrons easily when it gets excited by energy. This is where the conversion from light energy to chemical energy begins.
when the plant gets carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight energy it will create oxygen and sugar.
plants grow very well on the sunlight. it can prepare photosynthesis with this sunlight. it gets lots of vitamin-D in the sunlight
Chloroplast is the ekaryote organism that photosynthesis gets its energy from.
plants make food from the process of photosynthesis. through this, plants take in light energy from the sun along with CO2 from animals respiratory waste, to store into mechanisms they have called chloryphyll/chloroplasts. From there, plants can make compound sugars; glucose used to nourish plants, and cellulose used as the plants protective "skin" outercoating. only glycogen is edible for humans, whereas celluse is too complex for our bodies to completely break down into simpler substances.
No, animals cannot perform photosynthesis to directly convert sunlight into energy. Only plants, algae, and some bacteria can carry out photosynthesis. Animals get their energy by consuming plants, other animals, or by breaking down molecules through cellular respiration.
In photosynthesis, plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) and sunlight to produce oxygen and glucose. This process benefits both plants and animals by releasing oxygen into the atmosphere, which animals require for respiration. In turn, animals produce CO2 during respiration, which plants can then use for photosynthesis, creating a symbiotic relationship between the two.