Why do some plants appear green?
Green plants are green because they contain a pigment called
chlorophyll. Chlorophyll absorbs certain wavelengths of light within the
visible light spectrum. As shown in detail in the absorption spectra,
chlorophyll absorbs light in the red (long wavelength) and the blue
(short wavelength) regions of the visible light spectrum. Green light is
not absorbed but reflected, making the plant appear green.
Chlorophyll is found in the chloroplasts of plants. There are various
types of chlorophyll structures, but plants contain chlorophyll a and
b. These two types of chlorophyll differ only slightly, in the
composition of a single side chain.
Absorption spectra showing how the different side chains in
chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b result in slightly different absorptions
of visible light. Light with a wavelength of 460 nm is not
significantly absorbed by chlorophyll a, but will instead be captured by
chlorophyll b, which absorbs strongly at that wavelength. The two kinds
of chlorophyll in plants complement each other in absorbing sunlight.
Plants are able to satisfy their energy requirements by absorbing light
from the blue and red parts of the spectrum. However, there is still a
large spectral region between 500 and 600 nm where chlorophyll absorbs
very little light, and plants appear green because this light is
reflected.
What is chlorophyll?
Chlorophyll is a compound that is known as a chelate. A chelate
consists of a central metal ion bonded to a large organic molecule,
composed of carbon, hydrogen, and other elements such as oxygen and
nitrogen.
Chlorophyll has magnesium as its central metal ion, and the large
organic molecule to which it bonds is known as a porphyrin. The
porphyrin contains four nitrogen atoms bonded to the magnesium ion in a
square planar arrangement. Chlorophyll occurs in a variety of forms.
The structure of chlorophyll a.
Chlorophyll does not contain chlorine as the name might suggest; the
chloro- portion stems from the Greek chloros, which means yellowish
green. The element chlorine derives its name from the same source, being
a yellowish-green gas.
How do birds and animals see plants?
Vegetation will not appear to animals as it does to us. Although our
color perception is the most advanced amongst mammals, humans have less
effective color vision than many birds, reptiles, insects and even fish.
Humans are trichromats, sensitive to three fundamental wavelengths of
visible light. Our brains interpret color depending on the ratio of red,
green and blue light. Some insects are able to see ultraviolet light.
Birds are tetrachromatic, able to distinguish four basic wavelengths of
light, sometimes ranging into ultraviolet wavelengths, giving them a far
more sensitive color perception.
It is hard for us to imagine how the world appears to birds, but they
will certainly be able to distinguish more hues of green than we do,
and so are far more able to distinguish between types of plants. We can
speculate that this is of great benefit when choosing where to feed,
take shelter and rear young. Aquatic creatures, from fish to the
hyperspectral mantis shrimp (which distinguishes up to twelve distinct
wavelengths of light) are uniquely tuned to the colors of their
environment. The pages on
animals include more information on the variety of color vision in the animal kingdom.
The vivid colors of
fall leaves
emerge as yellow and red pigments, usually masked by chlorophyll, are
revealed by its absence. Chlorophyll decomposes in bright sunlight, and
plants constantly synthesize chlorophyll to replenish it. In the fall,
as part of their preparation for winter, deciduous plants stop producing
chlorophyll. Our eyes are tuned to distinguish the changing colors of
the plants, which provide us with information such as when fruits are
ripe and when the seasons are starting to change.
Apart from coloring, has chlorophyll any other role?
The green color of chlorophyll is secondary to its importance in
nature as one of the most fundamentally useful chelates. It channels the
energy of sunlight into chemical energy, converting it through the
process of photosynthesis. In photosynthesis, chlorophyll absorbs energy
to transform carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates and oxygen.
This is the process that converts solar energy to a form that can be
utilized by plants, and by the animals that eat them, to form the
foundation of the food chain.
Chlorophyll is a molecule that traps light - and is called a photoreceptor.
Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis is the reaction that takes place between carbon
dioxide and water, catalysed by sunlight, to produce glucose and a waste
product, oxygen. The chemical equation is as follows:
Glucose can be used immediately to provide energy for metabolism or
growth, or stored for use later by being converted to a starch polymer.
The by-product oxygen is released into the air, and breathed in by
plants and animals during respiration. Plants perform a vital role in
replenishing the oxygen level in the atmosphere.
In photosynthesis, electrons are transferred from water to carbon
dioxide in a reduction process. Chlorophyll assists in this process by
trapping solar energy. When chlorophyll absorbs energy from sunlight, an
electron in the chlorophyll molecule is excited from a lower to a
higher energy state. The excited electron is more easily transferred to
another molecule. A chain of electron-transfer steps follows, ending
when an electron is transferred to a carbon dioxide molecule. The
original chlorophyll molecule is able to accept a new electron from
another molecule. This ends a process that began with the removal of an
electron from a water molecule. The oxidation-reduction reaction between
carbon dioxide and water known as photosynthesis relies on the aid of
chlorophyll.
There are actually several types of chlorophyll, but all land
plants contain chlorophyll a and b. These 2 types of chlorophyll are
identical in composition apart from one side chain, composed of a -CH3
in chlorophyll a, while in chlorophyll b it is -CHO. Both consist of a
very stable network of alternating single and double bonds, a structure
that allows the orbitals to delocalize, making them excellent
photoreceptors. The delocalised polyenes have very strong absorption
bands in the visible light spectrum, making them ideal for the
absorption of solar energy.
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The chlorophyll molecule is highly effective in absorbing sunlight,
but in order to synthesize carbohydrates most efficiently, it needs to
be attached to the backbone of a complex protein. This protein provides
exactly the required orientation of the chlorophyll molecules, keeping
them in the optimal position that enables them to react efficiently with
nearby CO2 and H2O molecules. This bacterial photoreceptor protein
forms the backbone for a number of chlorophyll molecules.
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The basic structure seen in the chlorophyll molecule recurs in a
number of molecules that assist in biochemical oxidation-reduction
reactions, because it is ideally suited to promote electron transfer.
Heme consists of a porphyrin similar to that in chlorophyll with an iron
(II) ion at its center. Heme is bright red, the pigment that
characterizes red blood. In the red blood cells of vertebrates, heme is
bound to proteins to form hemoglobin. Oxygen enters the bloodstream in
the lungs, gills or other respiratory surfaces and combines with
hemoglobin. This oxygen is carried round the body of the organism in the
bloodstream and released in the tissues. Hemoglobin in the muscle cells
is known as myoglobin, a form that enables the organism to store oxygen
as an electron source, ready for energy-releasing oxidation-reduction
reactions.
Commercial pigments
Chlorophyll is a pigment that causes a green colour. Chlorophyll as a
green dye has been used commercially in processed foods, toothpaste,
soaps and cosmetics. Commercial pigments with structures similar to
chlorophyll have been produced in a range of colors. In some, the
porphyrin is modified, for example by replacing the chlorine atoms with
hydrogen atoms. In others, different metal ions may be present.
Phthalocyanine is a popular bright blue pigment with a copper ion at the
center of the porphyrin.
Phthalocyanine is a blue pigment.
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