White Plant Photosynthesis: How Plants That Aren’t Green Photosynthesize

ghost flower

Image by EzumeImages

Did you ever wonder how plants that aren’t green
photosynthesize? Plant
photosynthesis
occurs when sunlight creates a chemical reaction in the
leaves and stems of plants. This reaction turns carbon dioxide and water into a
form of energy that can be used by living things. Chlorophyll is the green
pigment in leaves that captures the sun’s energy. Chlorophyll appears green to
our eyes because it absorbs other colors of the visible spectrum and reflects
the color green.

How Plants That Aren’t Green Photosynthesize

If plants require chlorophyll to produce energy from
sunlight, it’s logical to wonder if photosynthesis without chlorophyll can
occur. The answer is yes. Other photopigments can also utilize photosynthesis
to convert the sun’s energy.

Plants that have purplish-red leaves, like Japanese
maples
, use the photopigments that are available in their leaves for the
process of plant photosynthesis. In fact, even plants that are green have these
other pigments. Think about deciduous
trees
that lose their leaves in the winter.

When autumn arrives, the leaves of deciduous trees stop the
process of plant photosynthesis and the chlorophyll breaks down. The leaves no
longer appear green. The color from these other pigments become visible and we
see beautiful shades of yellows, oranges and reds in the fall leaves.

There is a slight difference, however, in the way green
leaves capture the sun’s energy and how plants without green leaves undergo
photosynthesis without chlorophyll. Green leaves absorb sunlight from both ends
of the visible light spectrum. These are the violet-blue and reddish-orange
light waves. The pigments in non-green leaves, like the Japanese maple, absorb
different light waves. At low light levels, non-green leaves are less efficient
at capturing the sun’s energy, but at midday when the sun is the brightest,
there is no difference.

Can Plants Without Leaves Photosynthesize?

The answer is yes. Plants, like cacti,
don’t have leaves in the traditional sense. (Their spines are actually modified
leaves.) But the cells in the body or “stem” of the cactus plant still contain
chlorophyll. Thus, plants like cacti can absorb and convert energy from the sun
through the process of photosynthesis.

Likewise, plants like mosses
and liverworts also photosynthesize. Mosses and liverworts are bryophytes, or
plants that have no vascular system. These plants don’t have true stems, leaves
or roots, but the cells that compose the modified versions of these structures
still contain chlorophyll.

Can White Plants Photosynthesize?

Plants, like some types of hosta,
have variegated
leaves
with large areas of white and green. Others, like caladium,
have mostly white leaves that contain very little green color. Do the white
areas on the leaves of these plants conduct photosynthesis?

It depends. In some species, the white areas of these leaves
have insignificant amounts of chlorophyll. These plants have adaptation
strategies, such as large leaves, that allow the green areas of the leaves to
produce sufficient amounts of energy to support the plant.

In other species, the white area of the leaves actually
contains chlorophyll. These plants have changed the cell structure in their
leaves so they appear to be white. In reality, the leaves of these plants
contain chlorophyll and use the process of photosynthesis to produce energy.

Not all white plants do this. The ghost
plant
(Monotropa uniflora), for example, is an herbaceous perennial
that contains no chlorophyll. Instead of producing its own energy from the sun,
it steals energy from other plants much like a parasitic worm robs nutrients
and energy from our pets.

In retrospect, plant photosynthesis is necessary for plant
growth as well as the production of the food we eat. Without this essential
chemical process, our life on earth wouldn’t exist.

This article was last updated on 11/24/21
Read more about Gardening Tips & Information

Did you ever wonder how plants that aren’t green
photosynthesize? Plant
photosynthesis
occurs when sunlight creates a chemical reaction in the
leaves and stems of plants. This reaction turns carbon dioxide and water into a
form of energy that can be used by living things. Chlorophyll is the green
pigment in leaves that captures the sun’s energy. Chlorophyll appears green to
our eyes because it absorbs other colors of the visible spectrum and reflects
the color green.

How Plants That Aren’t Green Photosynthesize

If plants require chlorophyll to produce energy from
sunlight, it’s logical to wonder if photosynthesis without chlorophyll can
occur. The answer is yes. Other photopigments can also utilize photosynthesis
to convert the sun’s energy.

Plants that have purplish-red leaves, like Japanese
maples
, use the photopigments that are available in their leaves for the
process of plant photosynthesis. In fact, even plants that are green have these
other pigments. Think about deciduous
trees
that lose their leaves in the winter.

When autumn arrives, the leaves of deciduous trees stop the
process of plant photosynthesis and the chlorophyll breaks down. The leaves no
longer appear green. The color from these other pigments become visible and we
see beautiful shades of yellows, oranges and reds in the fall leaves.

There is a slight difference, however, in the way green
leaves capture the sun’s energy and how plants without green leaves undergo
photosynthesis without chlorophyll. Green leaves absorb sunlight from both ends
of the visible light spectrum. These are the violet-blue and reddish-orange
light waves. The pigments in non-green leaves, like the Japanese maple, absorb
different light waves. At low light levels, non-green leaves are less efficient
at capturing the sun’s energy, but at midday when the sun is the brightest,
there is no difference.

Can Plants Without Leaves Photosynthesize?

The answer is yes. Plants, like cacti,
don’t have leaves in the traditional sense. (Their spines are actually modified
leaves.) But the cells in the body or “stem” of the cactus plant still contain
chlorophyll. Thus, plants like cacti can absorb and convert energy from the sun
through the process of photosynthesis.

Likewise, plants like mosses
and liverworts also photosynthesize. Mosses and liverworts are bryophytes, or
plants that have no vascular system. These plants don’t have true stems, leaves
or roots, but the cells that compose the modified versions of these structures
still contain chlorophyll.

Can White Plants Photosynthesize?

Plants, like some types of hosta,
have variegated
leaves
with large areas of white and green. Others, like caladium,
have mostly white leaves that contain very little green color. Do the white
areas on the leaves of these plants conduct photosynthesis?

It depends. In some species, the white areas of these leaves
have insignificant amounts of chlorophyll. These plants have adaptation
strategies, such as large leaves, that allow the green areas of the leaves to
produce sufficient amounts of energy to support the plant.

In other species, the white area of the leaves actually
contains chlorophyll. These plants have changed the cell structure in their
leaves so they appear to be white. In reality, the leaves of these plants
contain chlorophyll and use the process of photosynthesis to produce energy.

Not all white plants do this. The ghost
plant
(Monotropa uniflora), for example, is an herbaceous perennial
that contains no chlorophyll. Instead of producing its own energy from the sun,
it steals energy from other plants much like a parasitic worm robs nutrients
and energy from our pets.

In retrospect, plant photosynthesis is necessary for plant
growth as well as the production of the food we eat. Without this essential
chemical process, our life on earth wouldn’t exist.

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