Describe the experiment to be performed


Problem:


The vast majority of a tree's carbon comes from the air, which averages 0.03-0.04% by volume (300-400 ppmv) CO2. This is fixed through photosynthesis and eventually stored as glucose which the plant can then use for its metabolism.
Doing some quick math, this means that in order to produce 1 kilogram of carbohydrates (e.g. cellulose) a plant needs to process on the order of 2000-3000 cubic meters of air (and ?550 g or mL of H2O), which would fill a cube measuring 13-14 meters on a side. Note this is an ideal figure; a plant's fixing efficiency will likely fall as it depletes the air of CO2.
Plants do take a great deal from the ground, namely water, fixed nitrogen (for proteins), phosphorous (for nucleic acids), and several ions (sodium, potassium, calcium, among others)


If anyone has any experience with this statement, can you please enlighten to me?

Request for Solution File

Ask an Expert for Answer!!
Biology: Describe the experiment to be performed
Reference No:- TGS0876436

Expected delivery within 24 Hours