irwantoshut.com

 



CHLOROPHYLL

 

Chlorophyll is the green pigment in plants that absorbs light energy for use in photosynthesis. Chlorophyll also is found in simple organisms called algae and in some bacteria. Most plant cells do not produce chlorophyll unless the plant is exposed to light. This is why plants kept away from light are white or yellow rather than green. Chlorophyll is located in disk-shaped membranes called thylakoids within cells. In most plants, thylakoids are contained in tiny cell bodies called chloroplasts. The chloroplasts in the leaves of plants carry out all the essential processes of photosynthesis. Light energy absorbed by chlorophyll is channeled to specialized reaction centers in the thylakoids. The reaction centers, along with electron-carrier molecules, convert the light energy to chemical energy. Oxygen is released in the process.

Chemical energy is needed for taking carbon dioxide from the air, eventually leading to the production of sugars and such other food substances as starch, fat, protein, and vitamins.
There are several forms of chlorophyll. The most common forms in plants are chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b. They absorb most of the long wavelengths (red rays) and the short wavelengths (blue-violet rays) of visible light. They absorb the middle wavelengths (green rays) least effectively. Some bacteria, like plants, make their own food by photosynthesis. These bacteria have special chlorophylls that can absorb longer wavelengths called infrared rays, which lie beyond the visible light spectrum. When dried, chlorophyll looks like blue or green-black powder.
leaf tissue

Chloroplast, is a specialized structure within the cells of plants. Chloroplasts serve as the site of photosynthesis. They contain chlorophyll, the green pigment that absorbs energy from sunlight for use in photosynthesis. Chlorophyll also gives green plants their color. In the fall, the production of chlorophyll in woody plants ceases. The colors of yellow pigments in the chloroplasts then become visible.

Add Your Knowledge About Plants
How plants grow
Factors affecting plant growth
How plants reproduce
Parts of plants
L e a f
The importance of leaves
The leaf becomes fully grown
Specialized Leaves
How a leaf makes food
Photosynthesis
Chlorophyll
How to Collect Leaves
The Parts of a Flower
Variations in flower structure
The role of flowers in reproduction
Kinds of roots
 

The chloroplasts of most plants are shaped like disks or lenses. Under a microscope, they can be suspended in the part of a cell called the cytoplasm. Except for the cell nucleus, chloroplasts are the most visible structures in a plant cell. Chloroplasts are one of several types of specialized plant-cell structures called plastids. Other plastids contain yellow, orange, or red pigments, and provide the colors of many flowers and fruits. Plastids also store oil, protein, and starch.
Next >>>
Joseph E. Armstrong, Ph.D., Professor of Botany, Illinois State University. -

..

 

 

HOME
GLOBAL WARMING
INDONESIA FOREST
INDONESIA BIODIVERSITY
CDM IN INDONESIA
MANGROVE FOREST
THE IMPORTANCE OF TREES
FOREST AND ECOLOGY
KIND OF CONSERVATION
KIND OF BIODIVERSITY
HOW PLANTS GROW
FOREST PICTURES