The production of oxygen is a beneficial result of photosynthesis, but it is not the main purpose of this process. In fact, oxygen is simply a byproduct. Plants create their own food through photosynthesis. During this process, a plant's roots absorb water from the ground, and its leaves take in light energy and carbon dioxide. The plant uses these elements to make fats, proteins and starches that are then used to sustain the plant's life. During this process, extra oxygen is produced and released.
The first step in photosynthesis is the harnessing of the sun's energy. During this process, chlorophyll within the chloroplasts of plant and tree cells absorbs the light energy of the sun. Chlorophyll, a pigment, is also responsible for giving plants their green color. Chloroplasts act as collection centers in the plant cell, storing the sun's energy until it can be used. The harnessed energy from the sun then acts upon the water absorbed by the roots of the plant or tree by splitting the hydrogen from the oxygen inside a water molecule. Carbon dioxide exhaled into the atmosphere by animals and humans is then absorbed by the plant's leaves and paired with the hydrogen to produce sugar. The sugar is turned into plant food, and the extra oxygen created during this process is released into the atmosphere.
Ancient Greek philosophers theorized that plants got all of their food from the soil. This theory was maintained until the 1770s when British scientist Joseph Priestley discovered oxygen and its dependence on plants. Priestley knew that a burning candle placed in a sealed jar would eventually burn out but didn't know why this happened. Priestley put a living sprig of mint in the jar and found that the mint restored the air in the chamber so that the candle could burn. This experiment failed when he moved the jar to a dark corner of the room, but Priestley failed to see the significance of light in this process. Because of Priestley's mint experiment, scientists began to believe that plants purify the air. Doctors began putting flowering plants in the rooms of sick patients, believing that this purifying action would help their patients. Dutch physician Jan Ingenhousz wanted to know whether flowers truly help cure disease. In 1779 he determined that only the green portions of flowers cleaned the air and that this process only worked when flowers were placed in direct sunlight.
Because of deforestation and urban sprawl, the trees that convert carbon dioxide into oxygen for all living things are disappearing rapidly. Today, only about 30 percent of Earth's land mass is covered in trees. Each year, forests the size of Panama disappear. At the current rate, the world's rain forests will disappear within 100 years. Environmentalists are concerned that the rapid rate of deforestation is contributing to global warming since trees are necessary to consume the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and excess carbon dioxide is blamed for global warming. Geologists believe replanting trees is a top priority in order to ensure the preservation of the delicate balance that enables photosynthesis.