Part 1: What is it
Experiment 2: Aerobic Respiration in Beans
We will evaluate respiration in beans by comparing carbon dioxide production between germinated and nongerminated beans. As shown in the balanced equation for cellular respiration, one of the byproducts is CO2 (carbon dioxide):
C6H12O6 + 6 H2O + 6 O2 → energy + 6 CO2 + 6 H2O
We will use a carbon dioxide indicator (bromothymol blue) to show oxygen is being consumed and carbon dioxide is being released by the beans. Bromothymol blue is an indicator that turns yellow in acidic conditions, green in neutral conditions, and blue in basic conditions. When carbon dioxide dissolves in water, carbonic acid is formed by the reaction:
H2O + CO2 → H2CO3
resulting in the formation of this weak acid. If an indicator such as bromothymol blue is present, what do you think would happen? (Hint - what color would the indicator change to?)
|Materials | |
|(6) 250 mL Beakers |1 Pipette |
|24 mL Bromothymol Blue Solution, C27H28Br2O5S |6 Rubber Bands (Large. Contains latex; please handle |
|100 Kidney Beans |with gloves if you have a latex allergy.) |
|6 Medicine Cups (small, clear, plastic cups) |*Water |
|15 cm Parafilm® |*Paper Towels |
|Permanent Marker | |
|100 Pinto Beans |*You Must Provide |
| | |
Procedure:
1. Label two of the 250 mL beakers as Soaked: Pinto and Soaked: Kidney.
2. Fill each beaker with 200 mL water.
3. Count and transfer 50 pinto beans into the Soaked: Pinto beaker. Then, count and transfer 50 kidney beans into the Soaked: Kidney beaker. Allow the beakers to rest for 24 hours.
4. After 24 hours have passed, carefully strain the water from each beaker.
5. Place two paper towels on a flat work surface. Use the permanent marker to label one paper towel as Soaked: Pinto and the second as Soaked: Kidney.
6. Pour the soaked beans onto paper towels, keeping them sorted by bean type.
7. Label the remaining beakers as Dry: Pinto, No Pinto, Dry: Kidney, and No Kidney.
8. Place several layers of moist paper towels at the bottom of all six, 250 mL beakers.
9. Place 50 pre-soaked pinto beans into the Soaked: Pinto beaker, 50 unsoaked pinto beans into the Dry: Pinto beaker, and no beans into the No Pinto beaker.
10. Place 50 pre-soaked kidney beans into the Soaked: Kidney, 50 unsoaked kidney beans into the Dry: Kidney beaker, and no beans into the No Kidney beaker.
|[pic] |
|Figure 5: The image above shows what the beans, beaker,|
|and measuring cup set-up should look like. |
11. Dispense four mL of bromothymol blue solution into each of the six measuring cups. Then, place one cup inside each beaker (Figure 5).
12. Stretch Parafilm® across the top of each beaker. Secure with a rubber band to create an air-tight seal.
Note: If your Parafilm® seal breaks, plastic wrap (such as Saran® wrap) can be used as a replacement.
13. Place the beakers on a shelf or table, and let sit undisturbed at room temperature.
14. Record the initial color of the bromothymol solutions and observe the jars at 30 minute intervals for three hours. Record the color of the bromothymol blue in Tables 2 and 3.
15. Let the beans and the jar sit overnight. Record your final observations in Tables 2 and 3.
|Table 2: Bromothymol Blue Color Change Over Time for Pinto Bean Trial |
|Time |Pre-Soaked Pinto Beans |Dry Pinto Beans |No Pinto Beans |
|0 min | | | |
|30 min | | | |
|60 min | | | |
|90 min | | | |
|120 min | | | |
|150 min | | | |
|180 min | | | |
|24 hours | | | |
|Table 3: Bromothymol Blue Color Change Over Time for Kidney Bean Trial |
|Time |Pre-Soaked Kidney Beans |Dry Kidney Beans |No Kidney Beans |
|0 min | | | |
|30 min | | | |
|60 min | | | |
|90 min | | | |
|120 min | | | |
|150 min | | | |
|180 min | | | |
|24 hours | | | |
Post-Lab Questions
1. How did the color of the bromothymol blue solution in each beaker change over time in each condition?
2. What is the mechanism driving the bromothymol blue solution color change?
3. What can be inferred from the color change of the bromothymol blue solution?
4. What evidence do you have to prove that cellular respiration occurred in the beans? Explain your answer.
5. What are the controls in this experiment, and what variables do they eliminate? Why is it important to have a control for this experiment?
6. If this experiment were conducted at 0 °C, what difference would you see in the rate of respiration? Why?
7. Would you expect to find CO2 in your breath? Why?
8. What else could you incorporate into this experiment to verify that the gas is responsible for the color change? Design an experiment that shows the steps required.
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related searches
- what is it like being a lawyer
- what is it works
- chapter 1 what is psychology
- what is it like being a teacher
- what is it service management
- what is it like living in china
- chapter 1 what is economics
- national what is it day
- amoxicillin what is it prescribed for
- what is it like being a nurse
- what is it like in venezuela today
- 3 1 what is ecology key