The Stroma's Job
In this kitchen, plants use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to make sugar, their food. It's kind of like how you use flour, eggs, and milk to make pancakes. The stroma has all the tools and ingredients needed for making sugar.
When light comes in through the leaf, it hits another part of the factory called the thylakoid, which is like a solar panel. That part sends energy to the kitchen (the stroma), where the real work happens, turning simple stuff into food!
So, the stroma is the busy kitchen inside the chloroplast, working hard to make the plant's food using sunlight and other ingredients it gets from the air and water. Stroma is like the inside kitchen where plants make their food, chloroplast is the whole factory.
Imagine you have a little green factory inside your leaf, and it's called a chloroplast. Inside that factory, there’s a special room called the stroma, and it's like the kitchen where food is made.
The Stroma's Job
In this kitchen, plants use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to make sugar, their food. It's kind of like how you use flour, eggs, and milk to make pancakes. The stroma has all the tools and ingredients needed for making sugar.
When light comes in through the leaf, it hits another part of the factory called the thylakoid, which is like a solar panel. That part sends energy to the kitchen (the stroma), where the real work happens, turning simple stuff into food!
So, the stroma is the busy kitchen inside the chloroplast, working hard to make the plant's food using sunlight and other ingredients it gets from the air and water.
Examples
- A plant uses the stroma in its chloroplasts like a kitchen where food is made from sunlight.
- The stroma helps turn sunlight into energy, just like how a kitchen turns ingredients into meals.
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See also
- How Does Leaf Pigments and Light Work?
- How Does DITW - The Parenchyma and Stroma Work?
- How Do Plants Turn Sunlight Into Life?
- How Does Plant Pigments Work?
- How Does Photosynthesis (UPDATED) Work?