Organism using energy from light in metabolic processes
This article is about phototrophism, obtaining energy from light. For the tropism that governs growth toward or away from a light source, see Phototropism.
Most of the well-recognized phototrophs are autotrophic, also known as photoautotrophs, and can fix carbon. They can be contrasted with chemotrophs that obtain their energy by the oxidation of electron donors in their environments. Photoautotrophs are capable of synthesizing their own food from inorganic substances using light as an energy source. Green plants and photosynthetic bacteria are photoautotrophs. Photoautotrophic organisms are sometimes referred to as holophytic.[3]
Oxygenic photosynthetic organisms use chlorophyll for light-energy capture and oxidize water, "splitting" it into molecular oxygen.
Ecology
In an ecological context, phototrophs are often the food source for neighboring heterotrophic life. In terrestrial environments, plants are the predominant variety, while aquatic environments include a range of phototrophic organisms such as algae (e.g., kelp), other protists (such as euglena), phytoplankton, and bacteria (such as cyanobacteria).
Cyanobacteria, which are prokaryotic organisms which carry out oxygenic photosynthesis, occupy many environmental conditions, including fresh water, seas, soil, and lichen. Cyanobacteria carry out plant-like photosynthesis because the organelle in plants that carries out photosynthesis is derived from an[4] endosymbiotic cyanobacterium.[5] This bacterium can use water as a source of electrons in order to perform CO2reduction reactions.
In contrast to photoautotrophs, photoheterotrophs are organisms that depend solely on light for their energy and principally on organic compounds for their carbon. Photoheterotrophs produce ATP through photophosphorylation but use environmentally obtained organic compounds to build structures and other bio-molecules.[6]
^Lwoff, A., C.B. van Niel, P.J. Ryan, and E.L. Tatum (1946). Nomenclature of nutritional types of microorganisms. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology (5th edn.), Vol. XI, The Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, pp. 302–303, [1].
^Schneider, С. K. 1917. Illustriertes Handwörterbuch der Botanik. 2. Aufl., herausgeg. von K. Linsbauer. Leipzig: Engelmann, [2].
^Hine, Robert (2005). The Facts on File dictionary of biology. Infobase Publishing. p. 175. ISBN978-0-8160-5648-4.
^Hill, Malcolm S. "Production Possibility Frontiers in Phototroph:heterotroph Symbioses: Trade-Offs in Allocating Fixed Carbon Pools and the Challenges These Alternatives Present for Understanding the Acquisition of Intracellular Habitats." Frontiers in Microbiology 5 (2014): 357. PMC. Web. 11 March 2016.
^3. Johnson, Lewis, Morgan, Raff, Roberts, and Walter. "Energy Conversion: Mitochondria and Chloroplast." Molecular Biology of the Cell, Sixth Edition By Alberts. 6th ed. New York: Garland Science, Taylor & Francis Group, 2015. 774+. Print.
^Campbell, Neil A.; Reece, Jane B.; Urry, Lisa A.; Cain, Michael L.; Wasserman, Steven A.; Minorsky, Peter V.; Jackson, Robert B. (2008). Biology (8th ed.). Pearson Benjamin Cummings. p. 564. ISBN978-0-8053-6844-4.