Chlorophyll absorbs blue and red light but reflects and transmits green light, making plants appear green. This is why plants cannot utilize green light efficiently for photosynthesis - a fundamental physics-biology concept.
Rhizobium bacteria form symbiotic associations with legume roots, fixing atmospheric N2 into ammonia. The bacteria live in root nodules. This symbiotic relationship is agriculturally significant and frequently tested in competitive exams.
Mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell and produces ATP through oxidative phosphorylation. Chloroplasts produce ATP through photophosphorylation.
In the Calvin cycle, RuBP combines with CO₂ to form 3-PGA (3-carbon compound), which is the first stable product detected in C3 plants.
Rubisco is the most abundant enzyme on Earth and catalyzes both carboxylation (photosynthesis) and oxygenation (photorespiration) of RuBP.
Maize is a C4 plant with higher photosynthetic efficiency and drought tolerance compared to C3 crops like wheat and rice.
Etiolation is the adaptation to grow in darkness: shoots elongate, leaves remain pale (no chlorophyll), and seedlings appear yellowish.
Ethylene (C₂H₄) is the ripening hormone that triggers color change, softening, and aroma development in climacteric fruits.
One sperm nucleus fertilizes the egg (embryo), another fuses with polar nuclei (endosperm); this endosperm provides nutritive tissue for the developing embryo.
Chlorophyll a is the primary pigment that directly participates in the light reactions of photosynthesis and forms the reaction centre of both photosystems.
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