Carotenoids

/kəˈrɒtəˌnɔɪdz/ noun

Definition

Yellow, orange, and red pigments found in plants that assist in photosynthesis and protect against light damage. They absorb light wavelengths that chlorophyll cannot and give color to many fruits, flowers, and autumn leaves.

Etymology

From Latin 'carota' meaning 'carrot' and Greek suffix '-oid' meaning 'resembling.' The term was coined in the early 20th century after these pigments were first isolated from carrots, though they were later found throughout the plant kingdom.

Kelly Says

Carotenoids are like chlorophyll's colorful bodyguards! While chlorophyll does the heavy lifting in photosynthesis, carotenoids protect it from getting fried by too much sunlight - and as a bonus, they make sunsets possible by giving leaves their brilliant fall colors.

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