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Tuesday, 23 March 2021

Nutrition in plants class X

 

class 10th Nutrition in plants:

  • Green plants are autotrophic and synthesize their own food by the process of photosynthesis.
  • The process, by which green plants make their own food from carbon dioxide and water by using sunlight energy in the presence of chlorophyll, is called photosynthesis.
  • Oxygen is released during photosynthesis.
The process of photosynthesis can be represented as:
  • The process of photosynthesis takes place in the green leaves of a plant.
  • The food is prepared by the green leaves of a plant in the form of a simple sugar called glucose.
  • The extra glucose is changed into another food called starch. This starch is stored in the leaves of the plant.
  • The green plants convert sunlight energy into chemical energy by making carbohydrates.
The photosynthesis takes place in the following three steps:
  1. Absorption of sunlight energy by chlorophyll.
  2. Conversion of light energy into chemical energy, and splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen by light energy.
  3. Reduction of carbon dioxide by hydrogen to form carbohydrate like glucose by utilizing the chemical energy.
Conditions necessary for photosynthesis:
The conditions necessary for photosynthesis to take place are:

  1. Sunlight
  2. Chlorophyll
  3. Carbon dioxide
  4. water


  • Green leaves make starch as food. Starch gives a blue black color with iodine solution.
Raw materials for photosynthesis: 
The raw materials for photosynthesis are:

  1. Carbon dioxide
  2. Water

How the plants obtain carbon dioxide?

  • There are a large number of tiny pores called stomata on the surface of the leaves of plants.
  • The carbon dioxide gas enters the leaves of the plant through the stomata present on their surface.
  • Each stomatal pore is surrounded by a pair of guard cells. The opening and closing of stomatal pores is controlled by the guard cells.
  • When water flows into the guard cells, they swell, become curved and cause the pore to open.
  • On the other hand, when guard cells lose water, they shrink, become straight and close the stomatal pores.

How the plants obtain water for photosynthesis:

  • The water required by the plants for photosynthesis is absorbed by the root of the plants from the soil through the process of osmosis.
  • The water absorbed by the roots of the plants is transported upward through the xylem vessels to the leaves where it reaches the photosynthetic cells.
  1. The plants also need other raw materials such as nitrogen, phosphorus, iron and magnesium, etc., for building their body.
  2. The plants take these materials from the soil.
  3. Nitrogen is essential element used by the plants to make proteins and other compound.

Nutrition in plants:

  • Green plants are autotrophic and synthesize their own food by the process of photosynthesis.
  • The process, by which green plants make their own food from carbon dioxide and water by using sunlight energy in the presence of chlorophyll, is called photosynthesis.
  • Oxygen is released during photosynthesis.
The process of photosynthesis can be represented as:
  • The process of photosynthesis takes place in the green leaves of a plant.
  • The food is prepared by the green leaves of a plant in the form of a simple sugar called glucose.
  • The extra glucose is changed into another food called starch. This starch is stored in the leaves of the plant.
  • The green plants convert sunlight energy into chemical energy by making carbohydrates.
The photosynthesis takes place in the following three steps:
  1. Absorption of sunlight energy by chlorophyll.
  2. Conversion of light energy into chemical energy, and splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen by light energy.
  3. Reduction of carbon dioxide by hydrogen to form carbohydrate like glucose by utilizing the chemical energy.
Conditions necessary for photosynthesis:
The conditions necessary for photosynthesis to take place are:

  1. Sunlight
  2. Chlorophyll
  3. Carbon dioxide
  4. water

  • Green leaves make starch as food. Starch gives a blue black color with iodine solution.
Raw materials for photosynthesis: 
The raw materials for photosynthesis are:

  1. Carbon dioxide
  2. Water

How the plants obtain carbon dioxide?

  • There are a large number of tiny pores called stomata on the surface of the leaves of plants.
  • The carbon dioxide gas enters the leaves of the plant through the stomata present on their surface.
  • Each stomatal pore is surrounded by a pair of guard cells. The opening and closing of stomatal pores is controlled by the guard cells.
  • When water flows into the guard cells, they swell, become curved and cause the pore to open.
  • On the other hand, when guard cells lose water, they shrink, become straight and close the stomatal pores.

How the plants obtain water for photosynthesis:

  • The water required by the plants for photosynthesis is absorbed by the root of the plants from the soil through the process of osmosis.
  • The water absorbed by the roots of the plants is transported upward through the xylem vessels to the leaves where it reaches the photosynthetic cells.
  1. The plants also need other raw materials such as nitrogen, phosphorus, iron and magnesium, etc., for building their body.
  2. The plants take these materials from the soil.
  3. Nitrogen is essential element used by the plants to make proteins and other compound.

Site of photosynthesis: Chloroplasts

  • The site of photosynthesis in a cell of the leaf are chloroplasts which contain chlorophyll.
  • Chloroplasts are present in the photosynthetic cells (mesophyll cells) of green plants. These cells contain more chlorophyll than other plant cells. 

Experiments:

The experiments on photosynthesis depend on the fact that green leaves make starch as food and the starch gives a blue –black colour with iodine solution.
Experiment to show that Sunlight is necessary for photosynthesis:

  1. Take a potted plant with green leaves and place it in a dark place for about three days to destarch its leaves.
  2. Take a thin strip of aluminum foil and wrap it in the centre of one leaf on the both sides so that sunlight may not fall on this covered part of the leaf.
  3. The remaining part of the leaf remains uncovered and exposed to sunlight.
  4. Now keep the plant in sunshine for about six hours.
  5. Pluck the partially covered leaf from the plant and remove its aluminum foil.
  6. Remove its green color chlorophyll by boiling the leaf in alcohol with the help of water bath.
  7. Wash the decolorized leaf with water to remove any chlorophyll which may be sticking in it.
  8. Pour iodine solution over the colorless leaf and observe the change in colour of the leaf.
Observation:
  1. On adding iodine solution, Covered part of the leaf does not turn blue-black showing that no starch is present in this middle part of the leaf.
  2. The uncovered part of the leaf which received light turns blue-black showing that starch is present in this part of the leaf.

Inference: Since the part of the leaf which was covered and hidden from sunlight does not contain starch and the part of the leaf which was exposed to sunlight contains starch. Therefore, sunlight is necessary for photosynthesis.Site of photosynthesis: Chloroplasts

  • The site of photosynthesis in a cell of the leaf are chloroplasts which contain chlorophyll.
  • Chloroplasts are present in the photosynthetic cells (mesophyll cells) of green plants. These cells contain more chlorophyll than other plant cells. 

36 comments:

  1. Thank you ma'am for the notes will complete
    RIYA CHHABRA
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you mam for the notes!
    Simran Chopra
    XG

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you mam for notes!
    X-G
    Harsh vardhan

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thankyou mam for the notes
    Ananya dogra
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  5. ma'am completed very useful thank you ma'am
    RIYA CHHABRA
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  6. Micro organisms name - algae,fungi

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mam Notes done with experiments
    Very useful thank you mam
    Harsh Vardhan
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you mam for the notes
    Shruti Mittal
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  9. THANKU MAM FOR THE NOTES
    AYUSH Awasthi
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  10. Today's class is very knowledgeable and you are the best teacher because u explain every thing very smoothly
    Dhaarna gosain 8th D

    ReplyDelete
  11. Thank u mam for the notes -anshika X-G

    ReplyDelete
  12. Ma'am the orientation was too informative first I didn't know about some things but all my doubts are clear now thank you ma'am
    Riya Chhabra
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  13. Thank you mam for notes

    ReplyDelete
  14. I am Diva Rawar
    Do you know there is a lockdown in jharkhand

    ReplyDelete
  15. Thank you mam for the notes

    ReplyDelete
  16. Hyperthermophiles live inside rocks in cold deserts

    I am Diva Rawar

    ReplyDelete
  17. Thank you mam for the notes
    Yugank

    ReplyDelete
  18. Thank u maam
    Purva
    XG

    ReplyDelete
  19. ingestion, digestion , absorbtion, assimilation and egestion.
    Riya Chhabra
    XG

    ReplyDelete
  20. Kangana mehta lX - C
    Scored 10/10

    ReplyDelete
  21. Thank You ma'am for the notes
    Daksh Jaitly
    X-G

    ReplyDelete
  22. Thanku mam for notes
    Prasita kumari

    ReplyDelete
  23. Pakhi garg 8 D has presented her enrichment activity on topic traditional and modern ways of preseservation of food
    thanks mam

    ReplyDelete
  24. Thanks mam
    Devansh garg XG

    ReplyDelete
  25. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  26. thanks a lot mam for this work
    by akshat wadhwa

    ReplyDelete
  27. Ma'am done with the revision of notes
    thank you ma'am for the notes

    ReplyDelete
  28. This was really helpful, thank you ma'am.

    ReplyDelete