How Much Oxygen Does Grass Make?

••• marylooo/iStock/GettyImages

Grass produces the oxygen we breath through a complex process called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis occurs in every type of plant. The amount of oxygen produced varies depending on how much "green" the plant has. One of the best oxygen producers does not even live on land.

Function

Plants and certain bacteria produce oxygen with sunlight through photosynthesis. Plants absorb light through the pigment chlorophyll, which then sends that energy into the storage parts in the plant. Carbon dioxide, readily available in our atmosphere, is taken in through small openings called stomata. The result of the mix between carbon dioxide, water and sunlight is sugar and oxygen.

Net Oxygen

According to Anthony Brach, the actual weighed amount of oxygen that grass produces does not matter as much as the net amount of oxygen produced in its life cycle. Grass does not produce much net oxygen because of the type of carbon it produces. When grass dies, its carbon products—sugars and starches—use up oxygen and release carbon dioxide when it decays. If an animal eats the grass, oxygen is used by the cow's digestive process to turn the grass into energy. Thus, grass is a poor producer of oxygen.

Surface Area

According to Jim Tokuhisa, there is no set amount for how much oxygen any single blade of grass produces. How much oxygen a plant produces depends on the amount of surface area that its blades cover. The more stomata a blade of grass contains, the more carbon dioxide and sunlight it takes in, and the greater the amount of oxygen is produced.

Placement

Where grass is located also affects how much oxygen it produces. Grass does not do very well in forests because of the canopy that prevents most sunlight from reaching the floor of the forest. According to University of Michigan's Global Change website, one square meter of grassland produces an average of 2,400 kilo-calories of energy per year. This is about smack in the middle for all types of land.

Better Sources

While most people learn in school that oxygen comes from plants in the ground, this is only half true. About half of the world's oxygen comes from phytoplankton, one-celled plants that live in the ocean. More important than producing oxygen, phytoplankton soak up carbon dioxide through photosynthesis. The process allows life in the oceans. Without these little plants we might not have an ecosystem.

Related Articles

What Process Is Responsible for Producing Most of Earth's...
What Gas Do Green Plants Give Off?
How to Calculate Net Primary Productivity
The Differences Between Photosynthesis & Respiration
What Type of Vegetation Is Found in Coral Reefs?
How Does Deforestation Affect the Air?
How to Determine the Ratio Between the Elements in...
The Greenhouse Effect & Photosynthesis
Is the Krebs Cycle Aerobic or Anaerobic?
The Major Producers Found in Aquatic Ecosystems
How to Find Molecular Formula From Empirical Formula
What Follows Glycolysis if Oxygen Is Present?
The Cycle of Oxygen Through an Ecosystem
What Are the Resources of the Amazon Rainforest?
How Is Carbon Dioxide Absorbed During Photosynthesis?
How Does Recycling Paper Affect the Environment?
Organelles Involved in Photosynthesis
What Is the Role of Producers in an Ecosystem?
Role of Photosynthesis in Nature
Things That Makes Up an Ecosystem