The green colour of the plant
Plants that use photosynthesis to get food are green because the chloroplasts in their cells are green
chlorophyll is the green coloring plants use in photosynthesis
Almost all plants use photosynthesis, even some without chlorophyll. But green plants would not be green if they were not using chlorophyll-based photosynthesis.
Chlorophyll is the substance found in plants that indicates photosynthesis has occurred. It is responsible for the green color of plants and is essential for absorbing light energy to drive the photosynthetic process.
An inorganic molecule required by green plants for the process of photosynthesis is carbon dioxide.
Oxygen is the gas given out by green plants during photosynthesis.
Plants are green because they contain chlorophyll, a pigment that reflects green light. Chlorophyll is essential for photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into energy. By absorbing other colors of light and reflecting green light, chlorophyll is able to capture the energy needed for photosynthesis.
No, photosynthesis does not turn plants green. Photosynthesis uses light to create glucose and oxygen with carbon dioxide and water. Plants are green due to the chlorophyll found inside them. It is the chlorophyll that makes photosynthesis possible.
All plants, some protists, bacteria and blue green algae uses the sun to make photosynthesis. Plants use photosynthesis to create energy that then makes sugar for nutrient.
No, not all plants engage in photosynthesis. Only green plants and certain microorganisms have the ability to perform photosynthesis. Other types of plants, like fungi and non-green algae, do not carry out photosynthesis.
Cloraphyll
photosynthesis