Title: Calvin Cycle and Photorespiration
1Calvin Cycle and Photorespiration
2Calvin Cycle
- Where does the Calvin Cycle occur?
- In the stroma
- What goes into the Calvin Cycle?
- ATP, NADPH, Carbon Dioxide
- What comes out of the Calvin Cycle?
- Sugar, ADP, NADP
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6The G3P made in the Calvin Cycle is involved in
the biosynthesis of other organic molecules
7Rate of Photosynthesis
- What is a rate?
- It is the activity per unit time.
- What factors can affect the photosynthetic rate?
8Light Intensity
9The Effect of Light Intensity on Photosynthetic
Rate
10Temperature
11The Effect of Temperature on Photosynthetic Rate
12The Effect of Light Intensity and Temperature on
Photosynthetic Rate
Which is the limiting factor here light
intensity or temp.?
13Oxygen Concentration
What would a graph for increasing levels of CO2
look like?
14Why Does Oxygen Effect Photosynthetic Rate?
- What is the role of rubisco?
- Rubisco incorporates carbon dioxide into the RuBP
during the Calvin cycle. - Rubisco, however, has an active site that
accommodates both oxygen and carbon dioxide. - What happens when rubisco incorporates oxygen
into the RuBP molecule?
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16Photorespiration
- The overall rate of photosynthesis decreases.
- Photorespiration and photosynthesis occur at the
same time
17Conditions for Photorespiation
- What conditions will lead to a lot of
photorespiration? - Hot
- Dry
- Sunny
- What happens to stomates under such conditions?
- They close.
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19Evolution
- Why does rubisco bind both oxygen and carbon
dioxide? - When Calvin Cycle evolved there was little oxygen
in the atmosphere.
20Solutions
- What solutions have some plants found for this
problem? - C4 Pathway.
- Sugarcane, corn, crabgrass have all evolved a
different structure that minimizes
photorespiration.
21What is the new structure?
22The bundle sheath cells!
How do the bundle sheath cells minimize
photorespiration?
23Different between C3 vs. C4 plants
- Photorespiration?
- Leaf anatomy?
- Levels of tolerancy under the hot, dry, sunny
conditions that favor photorespiration? - Light comp. point?
- CO2 comp. point?
24CAM Plants
- At night, stomata open, take in CO2, incorporate
it into organic acids and store those acids in
vacuoles until daylight - during the day, stomates close
- The organic acids stored at night, break down,
release CO2 and rubisco incorporates it into
sugar.
25Mesophyll cell
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27- C4 plants use a new structure to solve the
photorespiration problem. - CAM plants use time to solve the photorespiration
problem.
28Photorespiration cycle