Transcript Sun Worship
SUN WORSHIP
WE CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT THEM
Biological activity requires a source of energy.
Cellular respiration produces ATP.
Plants use some o f the ATP molecules they make
to
power the biochemical reactions that sustain life.
Create more tissue (e.g., leaves)
The energy to power these reactions comes from
the SUN!
Organisms that produce their own food are called
producers.
Plants are producers because they make their own
food.
WE CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT THEM
Animals can’t create their own food. Why?
Organisms that can’t create their own food are called
consumers.
Consumers obtain the energy they need by eating
other organisms.
Herbivores = animals that eat plants
Plant tissues contain many energy-rich molecules – sugars,
fats, proteins
Digestion breaks down the molecules that make up the
plant.
Cellular respiration releases the energy that was stored in
the bonds of the molecules in plants and produces ATP.
Herbivores use the energy for movement and growth
All the energy originally came from the SUN!
WE CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT THEM
Carnivore = animal that eats other animals
Omnivore = animal that eats plants and animals
The tissues of animals are made up of energy-rich
molecules – sugars, fats, proteins.
Digestion breaks down the molecules that make up
the meat.
Cellular respiration releases the energy that was
stored in the bonds of the molecules in animals and
produces ATP.
Carnivores/Omnivores use the energy for movement
and growth (building new body tissues)
All the energy originally came from the SUN!
WE CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT THEM
Heterotrophs are organisms that obtain their
energy from other organisms.
They can’t make their own food
Examples: animals, fungi, bacteria
Autotrophs are organisms that can create their
own food from nonliving sources, such as the Sun,
air, and minerals.
Examples: plants, some bacteria
How are they related?
Autotrophs provide the energy and organic
molecules needed for maintenance and growth of
heterotrophs.
WE CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT THEM
Demo: Calorie in a cheetoh
We measure the amount of energy in food using a
unit called the Calorie.
What do burning foods give off?
How is burning the food similar to what happens
during cellular repiration?
Why does burning different foods produce
different results?
ENERGY BUDGET
What do you notice about the amount of energy
transferred from one organism to another?
BIOSYNTHESIS AND BREAKDOWN
Metabolism – all of the chemical activities and
changes that take place in a cell or an organism
Cells have two types of metabolism:
Biosynthesis reactions – build larger, more complex
molecules from smaller, less complex molecules
Examples: build proteins from amino acids, build tissues
from proteins, photosynthesis
Require energy
Breakdown or decomposition reactions – break down
larger molecules into smaller molecules
Examples: break starch into glucose, cellular respiration
Release energy
BIOSYNTHESIS AND BREAKDOWN
Food provides the energy needed for biosynthesis
reactions.
Food also provides the organic molecules that
organisms need to make sugars, amino acids,
proteins, etc.
Plants make organic molecules from the sugars that
are made in the Calvin Cycle
Animals get the organic molecules they need by
breaking down their food through digestion
Enzymes in the mouth, stomach and small intestine help to
break food down into usable organic molecules: Sugars,
amino acids, glycerol, fatty acids
Organic molecules can enter various stages of cellular
respiration to create energy
Organic molecules can also be used in biosynthesis
reactions to create molecules needed for maintenance and
growth of the organism.
REFLECT AND CONNECT P. 353
List 3 examples of biosynthesis reactions
List 3 examples of breakdown reactions
Why are biosynthesis and breakdown reactions
important for organisms?