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AtomicJoe
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Surely black would be better.
AtomicJoe said:Surely black would be better.
Why is it green?
We see because of light bouncing off things and getting into our eyes, the colour that bounces off is what it looks like. Chlorophyll looks green because it stores the red and blue light and bounces off the green and yellow light which go to our eyes. However this doesn’t make much sense – most of the light from the sun is yellow and green! So plants aren’t even touching most of the light they receive.
We don’t really know why this is. Apart from a few communities in the deep ocean and purple bacteria, all life on Earth depends on chlorophyll and photosynthesis. So if something came along that was more efficient it would have had a good chance of taking over because it would have had more energy and could grow faster, pushing out the inefficient chlorophyll. This hasn’t happened in billions of years, so there must be a very good reason plants use chlorophyll.
The best guess is that chlorophyll is so good at storing and transferring light energy that this makes up for only being able to use a little bit of it, and molecules that store the abundant green and yellow light aren’t very good at it. This leads to an exciting idea. Maybe chlorophyll is unique – maybe it is absolutely the best molecule so if you are going to get energy from light you almost have to use it. In that case, maybe it is being used by living things in other solar systems too. What’s really exciting is that we can look for chlorophyll and it’s product, oxygen, on other planets. Looking at the light coming from stars with very special telescopes we can tell what is there because of the light that is being used and the light that is bouncing off, exactly the same as our eyes do on earth. We have already found over 500 planets in other star systems and are getting to the stage where we can detect them directly, it may not be too long before we can look for chlorophyll on other planets.
The biologist John Berman has offered the opinion that evolution is not an engineering process, and so it is often subject to various limitations that an engineer or other designer is not. Even if black leaves were better, evolution's limitations can prevent species from climbing to the absolute highest peak on the fitness landscape. Berman wrote that achieving pigments that work better than chlorophyll could be very difficult. In fact, all higher plants (embryophytes) are believed to have evolved from a common ancestor that is a sort of green algae - with the idea being that chlorophyll has evolved only once
mishrashubham said:Yes black would definitely better. It certainly makes sense for plants to absorb the entire spectrum of white light that is avilable. And so does absorbing infrared, ultraviolet, and whatever EM radiation that is available. Yet that is not the case. May be that is because there are no molecules, which are efficient enough to capture green light or other wavelengths and produce energy that gives the plant positive returns for its investment in making those molecules.
Indeed there are organisms which do not use chlorophyll as the major light absorbing pigment. A prime example is red algae, which absorb longer wavelengths since they have more penetrating power through larger depths in the sea.
You are right, thermoregulation is a significant possibility. Although I slightly disagree with the idea of having reached a peak in the Fitness landscape, since chlorophyll need not be replaced by another more efficient molecule. It could as well be an accesory pigment if it existed.ryan_m_b said:So in summary; plants are green because chlorophyll is. There is most likely something about chlorophyll that is advantageous though it is not currently known why. Personally I agree with John Berman;
EDIT: I'm not sure if this has been explored (I'll look it up when I have time) but being black would obviously cause a rise in temperature. This could disrupt the catalytic activity of the enzymes involved in the photosynthetic process, perhaps the need for a more efficient (and probably complex) thermoregulatory process makes anything other than chlorophyll unlikely to evolve as it would not be competitive against the simpler green chlorophyll unless it also evolved this thermoregulation at the same time.
Chlorophyll is green, it cannot turn black, or purple. It is other pigments added to the chlorophyll that give you leaves of different colours. Photosynthesis is a very complex process, and is not just a matter of absorbing as much light as possible... it is also about what is done with that light! Too much light is already a major problem for many plants, at least some of the time.
AtomicJoe said:Yes the idea that there is only one chemical capable of extracting energy from light just does not cut the mustard. There are numerous
mishrashubham said:You are right, thermoregulation is a significant possibility. Although I slightly disagree with the idea of having reached a peak in the Fitness landscape, since chlorophyll need not be replaced by another more efficient molecule. It could as well be an accesory pigment if it existed.
Evo said:Good discussion.
This thread at the naked science forum raises some of the issues.
http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=12870.0
This is really good.
http://cronodon.com/BioTech/Plants_FAQ.html
That Neuron said:If there was a black molecule (easily manafactured) that could eject electrons of a wavelength that could be accepted by a transport chain... nature would have done it already.
ryan_m_b said:Once green chlorophyll spread everywhere it could be that the required changes to develop a black molecule would lead down a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fitness_landscape" , thus would be selected against before it got there. I'm not saying this did happen, but it is possible.
Into the deep: new discoveries at the base of the green plant phylogeny
Frederik Leliaert 1)*, Heroen Verbruggen 1) and Frederick W. Zechman 2)
1) Phycology Research Group, Biology Department, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
2) Department of Biology, California State University Fresno, Fresno, CA, USA
Abstract
Recent data have provided evidence for an unrecognized ancient lineage of green plants, which persists in marine deep-water environments. The green plants are a major group of photosynthetic eukaryotes that have played a prominent role in the global ecosystem for millions of years. A schism early in their evolution gave rise to two major lineages, one of which diversified in the world’s oceans and gave rise to a large diversity of marine and freshwater green algae (Chlorophyta) while the other gave rise to a diverse array of freshwater green algae and the land plants (Streptophyta). It is generally believed that the earliest-diverging Chlorophyta were motile planktonic unicells, but the discovery of an ancient group of deep-water seaweeds shakes up our understanding of the basal branches of the green plant phylogeny. In this review, we discuss current insights into the origin and diversification of the green lineage.
Keywords: green algae; Palmophyllales; phylogeny; prasinophytes; Viridiplantae A brief history of green plant evolution
The green plants are one of the most dominant groups of primary producers on earth. They include the green algae and the embryophytes, which are generally known as the land plants. While the green algae are ubiquitous in the world’s oceans and freshwater ecosystems, the land plants are major structural components of terrestrial ecosystems [1,2]. The green plant lineage is ancient, probably over a billion years old [3,4], and intricate evolutionary trajectories underlie its present taxonomic and ecological diversity. The green plants originated following an endosymbiotic event, where a heterotrophic eukaryotic cell engulfed a photosynthetic cyanobacterium-like prokaryote that became stably integrated and eventually evolved into a membrane-bound organelle, the plastid [5,6]. This single event marked the origin of oxygenic photosynthesis in eukaryotes and gave rise to three autotrophic lineages with primary plastids: the green plants, the red algae and the glaucophytes. From this starting point, photosynthesis spread widely among the eukaryotes via secondary endosymbiotic events that involved the capture of either green or red algae by diverse non-photosynthetic eukaryotes, thus transferring the captured cyanobacterial endosymbionts (i.e., the plastids) laterally among eukaryotes [5]. Some of these secondary endosymbiotic partnerships have in their turn been captured by other eukaryotes, known as tertiary endosymbiosis, resulting in an intricate history of plastid acquisition [reviewed in 5,6,7]. Three groups of photosynthetic eukaryotes now have plastids derived from a green algal endosymbiont: the chlorarachniophytes, a small group of mixotrophic algae from tropical seas, the euglenophytes, which are especially common in freshwater, and some green dinoflagellates. A much wider diversity of photosynthetic eukaryotes, including the dinoflagellates, haptophytes, cryptophytes, chrysophytes, diatoms and brown seaweeds have
obtained plastids from a red algal ancestor, either by a single or by repeated endosymbiotic events
[6,8].
Please read on . . .
http://users.ugent.be/~fleliaer/publications/Into_the_deep.pdf
Mike H said:I think that the Plant FAQ at the Cronodon site Evo linked to hits the nail on the head - it's something that makes sense in the light of evolution.
ViewsofMars said:I'm sorry but I don't support that website. One reason is obvious by my previous post and the other is it recommends 'Adam McLean's Alchemy Web site and courses'.
Mike H said:I haven't looked at the rest of that website, so I can't offer any commentary on that.
Q.1 Why are plants green?
There is currently no complete answer available for this question, however, here follow the basics of what is . . .
I linked only to the plant FAQ, it appears to be factual based on my other reading, and it's explained clearly and in layman's terms. I am not concerned with what ever links they provide to other sites for reading other subjects.ViewsofMars said:Like I said earlier Mike, I don't support your comment, "I think that the Plant FAQ at the Cronodon site Evo linked to hits the nail on the head - it's something that makes sense in the light of evolution."
I provided evidence to the contrary in the bioessay Into the deep: new discoveries at the base of the green plant phylogeny dated July 11, 2011. If you read the bioessay it disputes the "cronodon" website that states:
Mike, as a "chemist" I'm surprised you didn't explore the website prior to supporting it. Like I said before, I don't support the Cronodon website since it distorts the truth as I've mentioned above and I surely don't support 'Adam McLean's Alchemy Web site and courses' which is listed on the cronodon website:http://cronodon.com/Links.html
I'm sure Evo didn't realize it was there as well.
An occult art whose practitioners’ main goals have been to turn base metals such as lead or copper into precious metals such as gold or silver (the transmutation motif); to create an elixir, potion, or metal that could cure all ills (the panacea motif); and to discover an elixir that would lead to immortality (the transcendence motif). The philosopher's stone is the name given to the magical substance that was to accomplish these feats.
Many modern alchemists combine their occult art with acupuncture, astrology, hypnosis, and a wide variety of New Age spiritual quests. Alchemists may have tried out their ideas by devising experiments, but they never separated their methods from the supernatural, the magickal, and the superstitious. Perhaps that is why alchemy is still popular, even though it has accomplished practically nothing of lasting value. Alchemists never transmuted metals, never found a panacea, and never discovered the fountain of youth. Alchemy is based on the belief that there are four basic elements—fire, air, earth, and water—and three essentials: salt, sulfur, and mercury. Great symbolic and occult systems have been built from these seven pillars of alchemy. The foundation of European alchemy, which flourished through the Renaissance, is said to be ancient Chinese and Egyptian occult literature. The Egyptian god Thoth, known as Hermes Trismegistus, allegedly wrote one of the books considered by the alchemists to be most sacred. (Hermes, the thricegreat, was the Greek god who served as a messenger and delivered the souls of the dead to Hades.) The book in question, Corpus Hermeticum, began circulating in Florence, Italy, around 1455. The work is full of magic incantations and spells and is now known to be of European origin.
http://skepdic.com/alchem.html
So we should erase Isaac Newton and other famous scientists because they were alchemists? You do know Isaac Newton was an alchemist?ViewsofMars said:Mike, I explained everything on the previous page and this one. As far as your comment, "Some people find discovering hidden delights in obscure texts to be enjoyable, others get their endorphin rush elsewhere." Your comment refers to "alchemy" which I have stood my ground because I don't endorse alchemy since it is psuedoscience! (1) Like I earlier said, "I don't support the Cronodon website! And I did say to you, "Mike, as a "chemist" I'm surprised you didn't explore the website prior to supporting it. Like I said before, I don't support the Cronodon website since it distorts the truth as I've mentioned above[refer to msg. #15] and I surely don't support 'Adam McLean's Alchemy Web site and courses' which is listed on the cronodon website:http://cronodon.com/Links.html'. You seem to still support the website and alchemy whereas I don't!
From Skeptic's Dictionary explains alchemy:
1. http://skepdic.com/pseudosc.html
ISAAC NEWTON: ALCHEMIST
I'm John Lienhard, at the University of Houston, where we're interested in the way inventive minds work.
Ok, your link says he's an alchemist.ViewsofMars said:Isaac Newton was not an ALCHEMIST! Geez whiz, don't believe everything from a website just because a person says he was an alchemist. Use some reputable websites:
1. Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences - Isaac Newton's Life
"I INTRODUCTION
Newton, Sir Isaac (1642-1727), mathematician and physicist, one of the foremost scientific intellects of all time."
http://www.Newton.ac.uk/newtlife.html
V ALCHEMY AND CHEMISTRY
Newton left a mass of manuscripts on the subjects of alchemy and chemistry, then closely related topics. Most of these were extracts from books, bibliographies, dictionaries, and so on, but a few are original. He began intensive experimentation in 1669, continuing till he left Cambridge, seeking to unravel the meaning that he hoped was hidden in alchemical obscurity and mysticism. He sought understanding of the nature and structure of all matter, formed from the "solid, massy, hard, impenetrable, movable particles" that he believed God had created. Most importantly in the "Queries" appended to "Opticks" and in the essay "On the Nature of Acids" (1710), Newton published an incomplete theory of chemical force, concealing his exploration of the alchemists, which became known a century after his death.
Evo said:I'm sure there are many articles about Netwon that do not need to go into his alchemy, there would just be no reason for it.
The truth though, is that Newton was an alchemist, it's in his papers. It's not a question of was he an alchemist, it's a documented fact.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/Newton-alchemist-newman.html
It doesn't mean he didn't achieve great things. My point is that his involvement in alchemy doesn't mean that we should discredit his other work.
Newton the Alchemist
The revelation that Sir Isaac Newton, perhaps the greatest scientist of all time, practiced the covert art of alchemy may shock us today, but was this pursuit considered deviant in Newton’s own era? To find out, we spoke to Bill Newman, an historian of science at Indiana University who spent years deciphering Newton's secret coded recipes.
Published: November 15, 2005
NASA: Sir Isaac Newton (1643-1727), one of the most important figures in the history of science, made significant contributions in the fields of physics, astronomy, and mathematics. In his Principia (1687), considered by many the greatest work of modern science, he explained the laws of motion and universal gravitation. Newton's discoveries in optics were presented in his Opticks (1704), in which he elaborated his theory that light is composed of corpuscles, or particles. These discoveries led Newton to the logical but erroneous conclusion that telescopes using refracting lenses could never overcome the distortions of chromatic dispersion. He, therefore, proposed and constructed a reflecting telescope in 1668, the first of its kind, and the prototype of the largest modern optical telescopes.
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/DawnClassrooms/1_hist_dawn/bio_review.asp
Professor Leo P. Kadanoff
University of Chicago
For inventing conceptual tools that reveal the deep implications of scale invariance on the behavior of phase transitions and dynamical systems.
Two of the deepest discoveries in condensed matter physics in the twentieth century were primarily conceptual: they revealed a new level of meaning and regularity in familiar but inchoate phenomena. These were the theory of divergent "critical" fluctuations at a phase transition and the theory of chaos in dynamical systems. Leo Kadanoff played the seminal role in the first and a major role in the second.
As with Newton's theory of planetary orbits, a new mathematical conception had to be invented in order to achieve our current understanding of critical fluctuations. The new notion came to be called the renormalization group: the system viewed at an expanded spatial scale was shown equivalent to the original system with altered parameters such as temperature and magnetic field. Kadanoff was the first to find a conceptual pathway to infer the transformation of the system parameters induced by such a spatial dilation. He was also the first to show that such a transformation contains the explanation of the peculiar power law divergences that characterize critical phenomena. Kadanoff's conception led the way to the powerful and systematic theories of Wilson and others.
The renormalization group concept has since proved applicable to many types of fluctuations whose spatial extent increases without bound. Kadanoff and others pioneered the study of scaling or fractal patterns that occur as a dynamical system evolves into chaotic behavior like that of a turbulent fluid. Kadanoff and others also showed how to use the concept of fractal measures to address complex, scale invariant patterns like those encountered in turbulence.
http://www.iop.org/about/awards/international/page_51315.html
AtomicJoe said:Surely black would be better.
Pythagorean said:One thing to keep in mind that lots of energy doesn't mean effective use of energy. The plants need to be able to direct the energy to where they need it. You don't drop an atomic bomb on your car to make the piston fire. You have to make an energy landscape that favors the motion of the piston (i.e. the energy state actually has to be lower on the other side of the piston so that it moves towards that space, away from the higher energy state).
Remember it's the structure of the energy landscape that's important, not the amount of energy present.
Most plants appear green because of a pigment called chlorophyll, which is responsible for absorbing sunlight and converting it into energy through photosynthesis. Chlorophyll absorbs red and blue light, but reflects green light, giving plants their characteristic green color.
Yes, there are many plants that are not green. Some plants have evolved to have different pigments, such as anthocyanins, carotenoids, and xanthophylls, which give them different colors like red, orange, and yellow. Other plants, like succulents, have adapted to have thick, waxy coatings that make them appear blue or gray.
No, black is not a natural color for plants. The idea that plants can be black is based on a misconception that black is the absence of color. In reality, black is a color, and plants do not have the ability to absorb all wavelengths of light to appear black. Even the darkest plants still reflect some light, giving them a dark green or purple appearance.
Yes, plants can still photosynthesize without being green. As long as they have the necessary pigments to absorb sunlight and convert it into energy, plants can photosynthesize in different colors. Some plants, like algae and bacteria, have different pigments that allow them to photosynthesize in a variety of colors.
Yes, the color of a plant can affect its growth and health. Chlorophyll is essential for photosynthesis, so plants with higher levels of chlorophyll tend to grow faster and healthier. However, plants with different pigments can also thrive in their own unique environments and may have other advantages, such as protection from UV radiation or attracting pollinators.