Carbon Dioxide & Oxygen as Waste Products of Metabolism (Edexcel IGCSE Biology: Double Science)

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The Need for Excretion in Plants

  • Within plant cells there is a range of metabolic reactions taking place producing waste products
  • Some of these waste products can be used up in other processes in the plant while some must exit the plant via the leaf organ
  • Waste products or substances in excess within a plant can include:
    • Oxygen
    • Carbon dioxide
    • Water/water vapour
    • Other unwanted chemical substances

Oxygen and carbon dioxide

  • Oxygen and carbon dioxide can be both reactants and waste products within a plant
  • The amount or intensity of light affects the waste products within plants
  • During the day, when there is sufficient light:
    • The rate of photosynthesis is higher than the rate of respiration
    • More oxygen is released than used in respiration
    • Less carbon dioxide is released than used in photosynthesis
    • Net effect - oxygen is in excess and a waste product

  • During the night, when there is insufficient light:
    • There is no photosynthesis, only respiration
    • Oxygen is used in respiration and carbon dioxide is produced
    • No photosynthesis means that no carbon dioxide is used
    • Net effect - carbon dioxide is in excess and a waste product

  • Whichever gas is in excess diffuses out of the plant via the leaf organ
    • The gases exit through the stomata

  • As the excretion of gases in plants occurs via diffusion it is technically not an active process

Water vapour

  • The majority of water vapour lost from a plant is not a waste product of metabolism, but instead water that has been drawn up from the roots in the transpiration stream

Excretion in plants, downloadable AS & A Level Biology revision notes

Excretion in plants during the daytime compared to night time

Chemical substances

  • Plant cells can break down molecules into chemical substances no longer required by the plant
  • Some of these substances cannot be converted into another useful compound and so must be removed from the plant
  • Chemical waste materials such as this can be stored in the dying tissues of a plant
  • When the dying tissue falls off the plant the substances are removed
    • E.g. in autumn the leaves of deciduous trees turn a variety of colours due to the presence of chemical waste products

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Lára

Author: Lára

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.