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Photosynthesis (/ˌfoʊtəˈsɪnθəsɪs/ FOH-tə-SINTH-ə-sis) is a
system of
biological processes by
which photosynthetic organisms, such as most plants, algae...
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antarctica and
Xanthoria elegans are
lichens that have been
recorded photosynthesizing at
temperatures ranging down to −24 °C, and they can grow down to...
- molecules,
leaves for photosynthesis, and
flowers for reproduction.
Plants photosynthesize,
manufacturing food
molecules (sugars)
using energy obtained from light...
- Euglena, a single-celled
eukaryote that can both move and
photosynthesize...
- bundles, and
their leaves are
reduced to
small scales, as they do not
photosynthesize.
Their seeds are very
small and numerous, so they
appear to rely on...
- has a bulb on its back,
which stores nutrients.
Since the bulb can
photosynthesize,
Bulbasaur can go days
without eating. As with the rest of its evolutionary...
-
blade shapes were
found to
decrease breakage and
increase ability to
photosynthesize.
Blade adaptations like
these are how kelp have
evolved for efficiency...
- feed on
bacteria and
other microscopic food in the water, some host
photosynthesizing microorganisms as endosymbionts, and
these alliances often produce...
- by
secreting digestive enzymes into
their environment.
Fungi do not
photosynthesize.
Growth is
their means of mobility,
except for
spores (a few of which...
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sterile leaves look
morphologically the same, and both are able to
photosynthesize. In
hemidimorphic ferns, just a
portion of the
fertile leaf is different...