The phrase
"pigment chlorophyll" refers to a substance found in plants that makes them green. It helps plants convert sunlight into energy through a process called photosynthesis.
Full definition
Just like their red algal ancestors, cryptophytes utilise not only the
green pigment chlorophyll for harvesting light, but have also the capability to use green light being missed by chlorophyll.
On Earth, the plant
pigment chlorophyll absorbs the most abundant and highest - energy colors that reach the planet's surface — red and blue, respectively — while reflecting green, giving vegetation its color.
Plants need different nutrients to thrive, such as nitrogen for making the light - absorbing
pigment chlorophyll and phosphorus for building proteins.
In plants,
the pigment chlorophyll plays a central role in photosynthesis: the process of converting sunlight to energy.
It's just that
the pigment chlorophyll (the pigment that makes the leaves green) is a much stronger pigment than the others.
Some grasses are rich in the green
pigment chlorophyll, a compound that is rich in anti-oxidants and free radical scavengers that help to boost an immune system stressed with illness.
Ackroyd & Harvey have received many awards for their photographic work utilizing
the pigment chlorophyll in making complex bio-chemical photographs; most recently they were presented with the Rose Award at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2014 and in 2012 the Wu Guanzhong Innovation prize for the 3rd Art & Science International Exhibition, Tsinghua University, Beijing.