Photosynthesis is the process by which plants use light energy to synthesize organic compounds. These organic compounds are made from CO2 absorbed from the atmosphere and are used to feed most living organisms. The availability of CO2 can greatly affect the photosynthetic process, either increasing the rate of CO2 fixation into organic compounds when supplies are plentiful or severely reducing it when supplies become limiting. Thus the effect of changing levels of CO2 on photosynthesis become more important as atmospheric CO2 levels increase due to the burning of fossil fuels.
In this experiment you will demonstrate that CO2 is required for photosynthesis, and that the rate of photosynthesis increases with CO2 concentration in the atmosphere until a CO2 saturation point is reached. At that point, photosynthetic rate is limited by the ability of the leaf to process the CO2 that is delivered to it. Limitation may be caused by insufficient light energy to drive the maximum rate of photosynthesis, or by the rate at which enzymes catalyze the steps in photosynthetic CO2 metabolism.
At very low concentrations of CO2 the rate of CO2 fixation in photosynthesis approaches the rate of CO2 production in photorespiration. When these two opposing fluxes of CO2 balance, the plant is at the CO2 compensation point. You will be measuring the CO2 compensation point in this experiment.
Materials
Leaves of a higher plant (either C3 or C4 species)
Qubit Systems CO2 analysis package with an infra-red gas analyzer
Gas bags containing CO2 concentrations of 10, 50, 100, 200,
434, 900, and 1200 ppm
Calculation of CO2 Exchange Rate
Measurements of photosynthetic, photorespiratory, and respiratory rates in leaves are usually expressed as rates of CO2 exchange per unit time per unit leaf area. The units most commonly used are µmoles of CO2 per m2 per second. To express your data in these units use the following calculations:
Convert the DCO2 value from ppm into µmoles per liter thus:
DCO2/22.413 ([T+C]/T)
where C is the temperature in °C and T is the absolute temperature
(273 K). At a temperature of 20° C and a DCO2
of 40 ppm, the DCO2 would be
equivalent to 1.66 µmoles CO2 per liter.
If you failed to record any of the essential data for your calculations during the experiment, you may retrieve the data from your saved file using the following procedure:
Leaf Area = _____ cm2
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CO2 Concentration
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DCO2 |
Photosynthetic Rate |
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When you have calculated rates of photosynthesis at each CO2 concentration used in your experiment, present your data as a graph with photosynthesis plotted on the y axis and CO2 concentration on the x axis.
A generalized photosynthetic CO2 response curve is shown below. Note that at low CO2 concentrations, photosynthesis increases almost linearly as CO2 concentration is increased. This is because at these concentrations the rate of photosynthesis is limited by the availability of the CO2 substrate. In C3 species CO2 and O2 compete for the active site of Rubisco, and as CO2 concentration is reduced the oxygenation reaction of Rubisco increases at the expense of the carboxylation reaction. At higher CO2 concentrations there is less of an increase in photosynthetic rate per unit increase in CO2, and eventually photosynthesis reaches CO2 saturation at the highest CO2 concentration used in the experiment. Under these conditions, the carboxylation reactions of photosynthesis are maximized, and photosynthetic rate is limited either by the supply of light to the light reactions or by the turnover rate of the photosynthetic enzymes.

From QUBIT SYSTEMS Inc
The photosynthetic CO2 response curve of a particular plant is influenced by many factors, and a study of the components of the curve can tell us a great deal about the physiology and ecophysiology of the plant. Important aspects of the CO2 response curve include:
The CO2 Compensation Point. Extrapolate the linear portion of the CO2 response curve to intercept the x axis at the point where photosynthetic rate is zero. The CO2 concentration at this point is called the CO2 compensation point and it represents the CO2 concentration at which CO2 consumption in photosynthesis is balanced by CO2 production in photorespiration.
The Rate of Photorespiration. If the linear part of the CO2 response curve is extrapolated to intercept the y axis at zero CO2 concentration, the negative rate of photosynthesis at this point gives an estimate of photorespiration rate.
Carboxylation Efficiency. Carboxylation efficiency may be defined as the increase in photosynthetic rate achieved per unit increase in CO2 at the site of CO2 fixation. In your experiment, you did not measure the CO2 concentration at the site of CO2 fixation, but only the CO2 concentration in the external atmosphere. However, a qualitative measurement of carboxylation efficiency may still be made by calculating the initial slope of the CO2 response curve.
The CO2 Saturation Point of Photosynthesis. The CO2 concentration beyond which the CO2 response curve plateaus is called the CO2 saturation point of photosynthesis. At this point increases in CO2 concentration do not cause increases in photosynthetic rate, so factors other than the supply of CO2 must be limiting the photosynthetic process. These factors include:
a) The supply of light to the leaf.
b) The amount, and turn-over rate,
of enzymes involved in the "dark reactions" of photosynthesis.
Estimate the CO2 compensation point, the rate of photorespiration, carboxylation efficiency, and the CO2 saturation point of photosynthesis from your graphs. Record the values below:
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CO2 compensation point |
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______________ |
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Rate of photorespiration |
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______________ |
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Carboxylation efficiency |
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______________ |
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CO2 saturation point |
= |
______________ |
| Support and funding provided by: |
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Andrew W. Mellon Foundation |
Instrumentation manufactured by: |
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