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Science of sugar - plants
 
 
 
All green plants make sugars. A plant's leaves contain a green substance called chlorophyll (it is this that gives plants their characteristic colour). The chlorophyll uses light energy from the sun to combine carbon dioxide and water to produce sugar. The water comes from the soil via the plant's roots while the carbon dioxide comes in through tiny pores in the plant's leaves called stomata.  The by-product of this process is oxygen.
 
                                   light
carbon dioxide + water --------> oxygen + sugars
 
The term used to describe the process by which plants make sugar is photosynthesis. It comes from the Greek words 'photo' (light) and 'synthesis' (joining).
 
Plants produce the sugars sucrose, glucose and fructose, these are then stored in the plant. These sugars give fruits their distinctive sweet taste.  Sucrose is the sugar most commonly extracted from plants by man.
 
Sugar beet and sugar cane are the only plants used in the processing of table sugar as it is only these plants that produce and store a sufficient quantity of sucrose.
 
 
There are a whole range of substances which make up the family of sugars. These include the sugars made by plants during photosynthesis, milk sugars and honey. Our bodies use all sugars in basically the same way, whatever the source, to give us energy for life.
 
 Sugar  Source of sugar
 Glucose  fruit, vegetables, honey
 Maltose  barley
 Sucrose  sugar beet, sugar cane, fruits
 Lactose  milk
 Fructose  fruits, honey
 
 
The sugars produced by photosynthesis provide an immediate source of energy for plants to live and grow. Sugars are also used as the building blocks of complex structures within the plant.   For example, cellulose (dietary fibre) forms plant cell walls and provides the plant with structure and support.
 
Sugars can be stored as starch, which provides an energy reserve at night, when plants are unable to photosynthesise (because of a lack of sunlight).
 
Starch is also used as a compact energy source in seeds.  The young seedlings are unable to photosynthesise and instead rely on this source of energy for growth.  Starch is found in large quantities in potatoes, rice and cereal grains (eg wheat).
 
 

 

 

 

 


Energy from the sun promotes photosynthesis 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Glucose units join up to produce starch chains - click to enlarge

 

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