The reactants for photosynthesis are the products for cellular respiration. determine what this is.

Karlous M.

asked • 02/16/18

Is this true or false? Thanks for people if they answer lol

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1 Expert Answer

The reactants for photosynthesis are the products for cellular respiration. determine what this is.

John M. answered • 02/16/18

High School and College Science Tutor

The products of photosynthesis are carbohydrates and oxygen.  Cellular respiration uses these as reactants and produces carbon dioxide and water, which are then used as reactants in photosynthesis.  It's the circle of life!

Alex S.

but is it true or false

Avril Q.

Yeah true or false

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1. Photosynthesis is the process plants use to make their own food.

Like all living things, plants need energy to carry out the processes that keep them alive. They get this energy from food. Humans and most other animals are heterotrophs, meaning we have to consume other organisms—plants, other animals, or some combination of the two—for food. However, plants are autotrophs, meaning they create their own food.

Plants use sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose and oxygen in a process called photosynthesis. In biology, this information is often expressed using a chemical equation.

Chemical equations typically show the molecules that enter the reaction (the reactants) to the left and the molecules that result from the reaction (the products) to the right, separated by an arrow that indicates a reaction taking place.

[Reactants] → [Products]

You can think of the reactants as the ingredients for preparing a meal and the products as the different dishes in that meal.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the chemical equation for photosynthesis:

Sunlight + 6 CO2 + 6 H2O → C6H12O6 + 6 O2

CO2 = carbon dioxide
H2O = water
C6H12O6 = glucose
O2 = oxygen

*Sometimes, you’ll see sunlight, or a symbol indicating the sun, over the arrow in the equation.

Therefore, to produce one molecule of glucose (and 6 molecules of oxygen gas), a plant needs 6 molecules of carbon dioxide and 6 molecules of water.

 

2. The reactants of photosynthesis are carbon dioxide and water.

We’ve established that plants need carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) to produce their food, but where do these reactants come from and how do they get where they need to go inside the plant?

Plants take in carbon dioxide from the air through small openings in their leaves called stomata. Some plants (most monocots) have stomata on both sides of their leaves, and others (dicots and a few monocots) only have stomata on the underside, or lower epidermis.

The reactants for photosynthesis are the products for cellular respiration. determine what this is.

Plants get water from the soil surrounding their roots, and water gets to the leaves by traveling through the xylem, part of the plant’s vascular system. In leaves, the xylem and phloem are contained in the vascular bundle.

Once inside the leaf, the carbon dioxide and water molecules move into the cells of the mesophyll, the layer of ground tissue between the upper and lower epidermis. Within these cells, organelles called chloroplasts use the carbon dioxide and water to carry out photosynthesis.

3. Light energy from the sun initiates photosynthesis in the chloroplasts of plant cells.

Plant cells have special organelles called chloroplasts, which serve as the sites for the reactions that make up photosynthesis. Their thylakoid membranes contain a pigment called chlorophyll, which absorbs photons (light energy) from the sun, initiating the light-dependent reactions that take place within the thylakoids.

The reactants for photosynthesis are the products for cellular respiration. determine what this is.

During these reactions, water molecules (H2O) are broken down. NADPH and ATP—high energy molecules that power the production of glucose—are produced during the light-dependent reactions, as well. Electrons and hydrogen ions from the water are used to build NADPH. Hydrogen ions also power the conversion of ADP to ATP.

4. The products of photosynthesis are glucose and oxygen.

Did you know that oxygen is actually a waste product of photosynthesis? Although the hydrogen atoms from the water molecules are used in the photosynthesis reactions, the oxygen molecules are released as oxygen gas (O2). (This is good news for organisms like humans and plants that use oxygen to carry out cellular respiration!) Oxygen passes out of the leaves through the stomata.

The light-independent reactions of photosynthesis—also known as the Calvin cycle—use enzymes in the stroma, along with the energy-carrying molecules (ATP and NADPH) from the light-dependent reactions, to break down carbon dioxide molecules (CO2) into a form that is used to build glucose.The mitochondria in the plant’s cells use cellular respiration to break glucose down into a usable form of energy (ATP), which fuels all the plant’s activities.

After the light-independent reactions, glucose is often made into larger sugars like sucrose or carbohydrates like starch or cellulose. Sugars leave the leaf through the phloem and can travel to the roots for storage or to other parts of the plant, where they’re used as energy to fuel the plant’s activities.

What reactants in cellular respiration are products of photosynthesis?

The reactants of cellular respiration are oxygen and sugar, which are the products of photosynthesis. Cellular respiration occurs in plant and animal cells. Plants use sunlight during photosynthesis to convert energy from the sun in order to manufacture sugar and the chemical energy ATP and to release oxygen.

What is the product of photosynthesis that is used for cellular respiration in plants?

Photosynthesis makes glucose and oxygen, which are then used as the starting products for cellular respiration.

What's the reactants of photosynthesis?

The process of photosynthesis is commonly written as: 6CO2 + 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2. This means that the reactants, six carbon dioxide molecules and six water molecules, are converted by light energy captured by chlorophyll (implied by the arrow) into a sugar molecule and six oxygen molecules, the products.