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Biology

Nutrition in Plants

PDF
Matthew Williams
|May 9, 2026|6 min read|
CSEC BiologyNutritionPhotosynthesisPlantsSection B

Autotrophic, heterotrophic, and saprophytic nutrition, photosynthesis, leaf structure, limiting factors, and mineral nutrition in plants.

Nutrition is how organisms obtain the raw materials and energy they need to survive. Green plants are the foundation of almost every food chain because they can manufacture their own food from simple inorganic substances using light energy.

Types of Nutrition

TypeDescriptionExamples
Autotrophicorganism makes its own organic food from inorganic substances using an external energy sourcegreen plants, algae, some bacteria
Heterotrophicorganism obtains organic food by consuming other organismsanimals, most fungi, most bacteria
Saprophyticorganism obtains nutrients by secreting enzymes onto dead or decaying matter and absorbing the productsfungi, many bacteria

Holozoic nutrition is a type of heterotrophic nutrition in which organisms ingest whole food, digest it internally, and absorb the products — the pattern seen in humans and most animals.

Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis is the process by which green plants use light energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen.

Word equation:

carbon dioxide + water → glucose + oxygen (in the presence of light and chlorophyll)

Balanced chemical equation:

6CO₂ + 6H₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂

Photosynthesis has two broad stages:

  • the light-dependent stage — light energy splits water, releasing oxygen and producing ATP
  • the light-independent stage — ATP is used to fix carbon dioxide into glucose

For CSEC, the key understanding is the overall equation, the raw materials, the products, and the conditions needed.

Remember

Photosynthesis uses CO₂ and H₂O to produce glucose and O₂. Respiration does the opposite. Both happen simultaneously in plant cells, but photosynthesis dominates in bright light.

What plants do with glucose

Plants do not just accumulate glucose. They use it in several ways:

  • respiration — releases energy for growth, transport, and reproduction
  • converted to starch for storage (in seeds, roots, stems)
  • converted to sucrose for transport through the phloem
  • used to build cellulose for cell walls
  • combined with nitrates to make amino acids and proteins
  • converted to fats and oils for storage in seeds

Leaf Structure and Photosynthesis

The leaf is the main organ of photosynthesis. Its structure is closely matched to this function.

Cross-section of a dicotyledonous leaf
Key1.Upper epidermis2.Palisade mesophyll3.Chloroplasts4.Spongy mesophyll5.Lower epidermis6.Stomata7.Guard cells8.Xylem9.Phloem10.Vascular bundle
Cross-section of a dicotyledonous leaf
FeatureAdaptation
Broad, flat shapemaximises surface area for light absorption
Thin structurereduces diffusion distance for CO₂ and O₂
Transparent upper epidermisallows light through to the palisade layer
Palisade mesophyll cellstall, closely packed, rich in chloroplasts; positioned near the top for maximum light
Spongy mesophylllarge air spaces for gas exchange; CO₂ diffuses to palisade cells
Stomata (lower epidermis)pores for gas exchange; CO₂ enters, O₂ and water vapour leave
Guard cellsopen and close stomata in response to light and water availability
Vascular bundle (midrib and veins)xylem carries water to cells; phloem carries glucose away
Waxy cuticlereduces water loss by evaporation
Exam Tip

A leaf structure question often asks you to explain how a named feature is adapted for photosynthesis. Always state the feature, describe its structural property, and then link it to how photosynthesis benefits — for example: "The palisade cells are packed with chloroplasts, which absorb light energy for photosynthesis."

Limiting Factors of Photosynthesis

A limiting factor is any variable that, when in short supply, reduces the rate of photosynthesis even if other conditions are ideal. At any given moment, one factor is most limiting.

FactorHow it limits photosynthesis
Light intensityprovides energy for the light-dependent stage; low light means less ATP produced
Carbon dioxide concentrationraw material for carbon fixation; low CO₂ reduces the rate even in bright light
Temperatureaffects enzyme activity; too low slows reactions; too high denatures enzymes
Water availabilityraw material split in the light-dependent stage; also needed for cell turgor
Limiting factors of photosynthesis

In a greenhouse, growers can increase yield by raising CO₂ concentration and light intensity together, since increasing one alone eventually hits a ceiling set by the other.

Mineral Nutrition in Plants

Plants absorb mineral ions from soil water through their roots. Two minerals are especially important at CSEC level:

Nitrogen

Nitrogen is needed to make:

  • amino acids and proteins (for growth, enzymes, and cell membranes)
  • nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
  • chlorophyll

Plants absorb nitrogen as nitrate ions (NO₃⁻) from the soil via active transport. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the soil and in root nodules of legumes also convert nitrogen gas into forms plants can use.

Deficiency effects: stunted growth, older leaves turn yellow (chlorosis), poor protein production.

Magnesium

Magnesium is needed to make chlorophyll — it is part of the chlorophyll molecule itself.

Deficiency effects: yellow leaves (chlorosis), particularly affecting younger leaves first; photosynthesis rate falls.

MineralRole in plantDeficiency symptom
Nitrogenamino acids, proteins, DNA, chlorophyllstunted growth, yellowing of older leaves
Magnesiumcomponent of chlorophyll moleculeyellowing of leaves, reduced photosynthesis
Exam Tip

Both nitrogen and magnesium deficiency cause yellowing, but nitrogen deficiency typically affects older leaves first (the plant relocates nitrogen to newer growth), while magnesium deficiency often shows in younger leaves too. Examiners may ask you to distinguish between them using symptom location.

Previous in syllabus order
Cells and Cell Transport
Next in syllabus order
Human Nutrition and Digestion