Light Dependent
Light Independent
Parts of the Leaf
Pigments
Cellular Respiration vs Photosynthesis
100

The ultimate source of electrons for NADPH.

H2O (water)

100

List the phases of the Calvin Cycle.

Carbon fixation, reduction, and regeneration?

100

These allow for gas exchange. 

Stomata?

100

The primary pigment directly involved in converting light energy to chemical energy.

Chlorophyll a

100

Identify the organelles responsible for Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration.

Chloroplasts for Photosynthesis and mitochondria for cellular respiration.

200

The reduction of NADPto NADPH decreases this in the stroma.

Proton (H+) concentration

200

The 5-carbon compound that initiates carbon fixation.

RuBP (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate)

200

These cells are the primary site of photosynthesis.

Mesophyll cells

200

Purpose of accessory pigments.

Broaden the range of light absorption, sun protection, and pass energy to chlorophyll a.

200

This molecule is a product in photosynthesis and a reactant in cellular respiration.

Glucose (C6H12O6)

300

List the components of a photosystem. 

1. Antenna Complex (Light harvesting complex): accessory pigments that absorb light and transfer energy.

2. Reaction Centre: specialized chlorophyll a molecules transfer energy from antenna complex to primary electron acceptor. 

300

The name of the wasteful process when rubisco binds with O2

Photorespiration

300

Predict the effect on ATP production if the thylakoid membrane became permeable to protons.

ATP production would decrease or stop, because the proton gradient across the membrane would dissipate, preventing chemiosmosis through ATP synthase.

300

Chlorophyll a absorbs light most efficiently at these wavelengths or colours. 

Around 430 nm (blue) and 660–680 nm (red).

300

Compare the energy conversions in photosynthesis and cellular respiration.

Photosynthesis: light energy to chemical energy. Respiration: chemical energy to usable energy (ATP).

Photosynthesis in endergonic (requires energy) and Cellular Respiration is exergonic (releases energy).

400

This pathway provides additional ATP without reducing NADP+.

Cyclic photophosphorylation 

400

Explain why it takes 6CO2 to make one glucose.

Each CO₂ contributes one carbon, and two G3P (3C each) are needed to synthesize glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆)

400

Describe the function of the stroma and identify which part of photosynthesis occurs there.

The stroma is the fluid-filled space around the thylakoids; it is the site of the Calvin Cycle (light-independent reactions).

400

Explain why green light is least effective for photosynthesis.

Green light is mostly reflected by chlorophyll pigments rather than absorbed, so it contributes little to energy capture

400

Explain why plants carry out both Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration. 

Photosynthesis produces glucose for energy storage, while cellular respiration breaks it down to release ATP for cellular processes.

500

The excited electron from P680 travels through this sequence before reaching PSI.

Pheophytin to PQ to cytochrome complex to PC

500

Compare the location and timing of carbon fixation and the Calvin Cycle in C3, C4, and CAM plants, and explain how these adaptations reduce photorespiration.

 In C3 plants, both carbon fixation and the Calvin Cycle occur in the same cells at the same time, making them more prone to photorespiration. In C4 plants, carbon fixation occurs in mesophyll cells, and the Calvin Cycle takes place in bundle sheath cells (spatial separation), reducing O₂ exposure to rubisco. In CAM plants, both processes occur in the same cells but at different times—CO₂ is fixed at night and used during the day (temporal separation), conserving water and minimizing photorespiration in arid environments.

500

Explain how the compartmentalization within chloroplasts supports the separation of the light-dependent and light-independent reactions.

The thylakoid membrane confines proton accumulation during light-dependent reactions, while the stroma provides a separate space with Calvin Cycle enzymes, preventing interference and increasing efficiency.

500

Explain the molecular reason why carotenoids travel further on the chromatography paper than chlorophyll.

They are smaller and more soluble in the solvent.

500

Both processes involve chemiosmosis. Describe how ATP production via chemiosmosis differs in the two.

In photosynthesis, protons build up in the thylakoid lumen and flow into the stroma, produces NADPH; in respiration, protons build up in the intermembrane space and flow into the matrix, requires NADH and FADH2.

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