Plants use carbon dioxide and water and produce glucose and oxygen in the presence of sunlight and chlorophyll.
Plants use sugars produced during photosynthesis to make organic compounds. Photosynthesis is a plants method of making food for itself.
photosynthesis
process by which plants and some other organisms use light energy to convert water and carbon dioxide into oxygen and high-energy carbs such as sugars and starches
Plants manufacture carbohydrates (sugars) through photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis
sugars and starches
Carbon, in the form of carbon dioxide, is converted by plants into sugars and starches during photosynthesis. The plants convert this into proteins etc.Animals then eat the plants....when they breath they get carbon dioxideand you get it when you eat a plant
Plants take nutrients in a process called photosynthesis, plants use energy from the sun to change carbon dioxide (CO2 - carbon and oxygen) and water (H2O- hydrogen and oxygen) into starches and sugars. These starches and sugars are the plant's food.
Plants use sugars produced during photosynthesis to make organic compounds. Photosynthesis is a plants method of making food for itself.
sunlight
In photosynthesis, the sun radiates thermal energy, or light. The plants take in this energy and convert it into chemical energy, as starches.
Plants use photosynthesis to turn sunlight (radiant energy, light) into chemical energy, which is stored in organic compounds such as sugars, starches, and cellulose.
They produce sugars and starches in plant cells through photosynthesis.
Glucose and O2 Sugars, starches and oxygen are products of photosynthesis.
the plant dies
It is impossible for a plant not have photosynthesis because photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast, in the plant cell. There are billions+ cells in a plant. But yes, because photosynthesis is the process where plants use the energy of sunlight to convert it into sugars and starches for energy.
During photosynthesis, glucose is manufactured from CO2 and water. This glucose is stored in the chloroplasts as starch grains, hence the name 'energy storage reaction' for describing photosynthesis.