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How do plants make food by photosynthesis, and what affects the rate at which they do it?

The word and symbol equations for photosynthesis, the role of chlorophyll and chloroplasts, the limiting factors of light intensity, carbon dioxide concentration and temperature, and experiments to investigate the rate of photosynthesis.

A focused CCEA GCSE Biology answer on photosynthesis, covering the word and symbol equations, the role of chlorophyll and chloroplasts, the limiting factors of light, carbon dioxide and temperature, and how to investigate the rate.

Generated by Claude Opus 4.88 min answer

Reviewed by: AI editorial process; not yet individually human-reviewed

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  1. What this dot point is asking
  2. The equations
  3. Chlorophyll and chloroplasts
  4. Limiting factors
  5. Examples in context
  6. Try this

What this dot point is asking

CCEA wants you to give the word equation for photosynthesis (and the symbol equation at Higher tier), explain the roles of chlorophyll and chloroplasts, describe the three limiting factors, and design or interpret an experiment that measures the rate of photosynthesis.

The equations

The glucose made can be used in respiration for energy, stored as starch, converted to cellulose for cell walls, or used with nitrates to make proteins for growth.

Chlorophyll and chloroplasts

Limiting factors

The rate of photosynthesis depends on three factors. A limiting factor is the one in shortest supply that holds back the rate.

  • Light intensity. More light means more energy for the reaction, so the rate rises until another factor becomes limiting.
  • Carbon dioxide concentration. Carbon dioxide is a raw material, so more of it raises the rate until it is no longer limiting.
  • Temperature. Photosynthesis is controlled by enzymes, so a warmer temperature speeds it up until about 40 degrees Celsius, above which the enzymes denature and the rate falls.

Examples in context

Example 1. A commercial greenhouse. A tomato grower wants the fastest growth, so they remove every limiting factor. They burn fuel or add carbon dioxide from cylinders to raise the carbon dioxide concentration, use lamps to extend the light hours, and use heaters to keep the temperature near the enzyme optimum. By removing all three limiting factors at once, the plants photosynthesise as fast as possible and grow quickly, which is worth the extra cost in higher yields.

Example 2. The starch test for photosynthesis. To show a leaf has photosynthesised, you test it for starch. The leaf is boiled in water to kill it, then in ethanol to remove the chlorophyll (using a water bath, not a flame, because ethanol is flammable), then dipped in hot water to soften it and spread with iodine solution. A blue-black colour shows starch is present, proving photosynthesis has occurred. A variegated leaf only goes blue-black where it was green, proving chlorophyll is needed.

Try this

Q1. Name the three limiting factors of photosynthesis. [3 marks]

  • Cue. Light intensity, carbon dioxide concentration and temperature.

Q2. Why does the rate of photosynthesis fall at very high temperatures? [2 marks]

  • Cue. The enzymes controlling photosynthesis denature, so the reactions slow and stop.

Exam-style practice questions

Practice questions written in the style of CCEA exam questions on this dot point, with worked answer explainers. The year tag is the paper they imitate, not the source.

CCEA 20206 marksA student investigates how light intensity affects the rate of photosynthesis in pondweed. Describe a method and explain the expected results.
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A six-mark answer needs a clear method, a measured variable, controlled variables and an explanation of the trend.

Method: place pondweed in water containing sodium hydrogencarbonate (a carbon dioxide source) and shine a lamp at it. Count the number of bubbles of oxygen released per minute, or collect the gas and measure its volume. Move the lamp to set distances to change the light intensity, leaving time to settle each time.

Control variables: keep the temperature constant (use a heat shield or water bath), use the same piece of pondweed, and keep the carbon dioxide concentration the same.

Expected results: as light intensity increases, the rate of photosynthesis (bubbles per minute) increases, because light provides the energy for the reaction. Eventually the rate levels off, because another factor such as carbon dioxide concentration or temperature has become the limiting factor.

Markers reward a measurable rate, named control variables, the rising trend, and the idea of a limiting factor causing the plateau.

CCEA 20183 marksState the word equation for photosynthesis and name the substance that absorbs light.
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Two marks for the equation, one for the pigment.

Word equation: carbon dioxide plus water, using light energy, produces glucose plus oxygen.

You can also write it with the arrow: carbon dioxide + water -> glucose + oxygen, with light energy and chlorophyll above the arrow.

The substance that absorbs light is chlorophyll, the green pigment found inside the chloroplasts. Markers reward the correct reactants and products in the right places and chlorophyll named.

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