How the kitchen works
Plants use chlorophyll, which is like green food coloring found in leaves, to catch sunlight. It’s like having a bright flashlight shining on your kitchen counter, it helps start the cooking.
Then, they take carbon dioxide from the air (like when you blow out birthday candles) and water from the soil (like what comes up from a garden hose). These are their ingredients.
Inside the leaves, there's a special recipe that turns sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water into sugar, which is like food for the plant. This process is called photosynthesis, and it’s how plants grow strong and green!
So next time you see a leaf, imagine it as a busy kitchen working hard to make food from light!
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See also
- How do plants convert sunlight into energy through photosynthesis?
- What is catenoid?
- Why Do We Need Both Eyes for Depth Perception?
- Why Do People Have Different Shapes of Faces?
- How does sleep actually affect our memory and learning?
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Categories: Biology