Nutrition in Plants
Plants make their own food using water, carbon dioxide, and minerals through photosynthesis — a process that requires chlorophyll and sunlight, and produces carbohydrates and releases oxygen.
- 1Plants are autotrophs — they make food from water, carbon dioxide, and minerals; animals and most other organisms are heterotrophs that depend on plants directly or indirectly.
- 2Photosynthesis requires four essentials: chlorophyll, sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water; it produces carbohydrates (including starch) and releases oxygen.
- 3Leaves are the food factories of plants; carbon dioxide enters through stomata (pores surrounded by guard cells); water and minerals travel from roots to leaves through vessels.
- 4Chlorophyll is the green pigment in leaves that captures sunlight energy; leaves of other colours (red, brown) also contain chlorophyll masked by other pigments and also carry out photosynthesis.
- 5Plants get nitrogen from soil bacteria — Rhizobium lives in roots of leguminous plants (gram, peas, moong, beans) converting atmospheric nitrogen into a usable form; this is a symbiotic relationship.

