Sentences with phrase «dioxide during photosynthesis»

Trees and plants capture carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, thereby removing the most abundant greenhouse gas from...
And we exist because in eating the carbon dioxide during photosynthesis the oxygen in it is released, how Earth got its oxygen atmosphere in the first place.
Because of methane's greater greenhouse potency, the warming potential of the emissions measured during the second period greatly exceeded the potential cooling produced by the uptake of carbon dioxide during photosynthesis.
Plants take in carbon dioxide during photosynthesis in the day, and release it during respiration at night.
As a result, the stressed trees close their stomata, or the tiny pores that take in carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and release oxygen as a byproduct.

Not exact matches

Plants convert carbon dioxide to oxygen during a process called photosynthesis, using both the carbon and the oxygen to construct carbohydrates.
The simulations suggested that the indirect effects of increased CO2 on net primary productivity (how much carbon dioxide vegetation takes in during photosynthesis minus how much carbon dioxide the plants release during respiration) are large and variable, ranging from less than 10 per cent to more than 100 per cent of the size of direct effects.
Trees are thirsty for the potent greenhouse gas carbon dioxide, soaking it up during photosynthesis and storing it in their roots, branches and leaves.
During photosynthesis plants use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into hydrogen - storing carbohydrates and oxygen.
Carbon dioxide produced during burning is fed to growing algae which recycle it through photosynthesis.
In climate change scenarios simulated by the model GOTILWA + — within the Consolider - Ingenio project Montes and the research project Med - Forestream — , net primary productivity of Spanish forests (how much carbon dioxide plants take in during photosynthesis minus how much carbon dioxide they release during respiration) will decrease from the second half of this century.
Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and convert it to organic carbon during photosynthesis.
During photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide from the air and transform it into sugars and other carbon - based molecules.
«Plants can convert carbon dioxide to energy during photosynthesis,» says Stephanie Pau at Florida State University.
Overturning textbook knowledge, the researchers discovered that the trees «exhale» less carbon dioxide during the day than previously thought, and that forest photosynthesis doesn't decline over the course of the summer.
CAM plants can flourish here by conserving water more effectively than traditional crops — they capture carbon dioxide from the air at night and convert it to malate, which fuels photosynthesis during the day.
Billions of planktonic organisms, too tiny to be seen with the naked eye, make this valuable service possible: When carbon dioxide from the atmosphere dissolves in seawater, various species convert it to organic carbon and other organic components during photosynthesis.
Forests and other land vegetation currently remove up to 30 percent of human carbon dioxide emissions from the atmosphere during photosynthesis, but thanks to this latest study, experts now know that we have tropical forests to thank for a great deal of this work - absorbing a whopping 1.4 billion metric tons of CO2 out of a total total global absorption of 2.5 billion metric tons.
Methods: During photosynthesis, plants take in carbon dioxide and convert it into carbon - based sugars needed to grow and live.
This is because the amount of CO2 released from E85 during combustion is practically identical to the level of carbon dioxide the plants absorbed from the atmosphere through photosynthesis when they were growing.
Forests absorb carbon dioxide from the air during photosynthesis, releasing oxygen back into the air and storing captured carbon in trunks, branches, roots, and soil.
Tropical forest trees, like all green plants, take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen during photosynthesis.
Plants also carry out the opposite process — known as respiration — in which they emit carbon dioxide, but generally in smaller amounts than they take in during photosynthesis.
Simply speaking, volcanoes helped form the atmosphere while living organisms have helped shape the atmosphere to their liking in two ways: firstly by warming the planet to a liveable temperature by producing methane and carbon dioxide during the process of decay of dead matter, and secondly by creating oxygen through the process of photosynthesis by our green friends in the plant kingdom.
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