Carbon Fixation
Reduction
Regeneration
General
100

What stage of the calvin cycle is carbon fixation?

Stage 1.

100

How many molecules of G3P remain in the cycle?

What is 5?

100

The calvin cycle regenerates this molecule to ensure the cycle continues.

What is ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP)?

100

What phase of photosynthesis is this?

What is 2nd?

200

Where does the cell get the additional carbon from

CO2

200

How many molecules of G3P make 1 glucose

2

200

How many additional ATP are required for this step?

What is 3?

200

Where does the Calvin Cycle occur?

In the stroma of a chloroplast.

300

How many molecules do we have at the end of carbon fixation?

6

300

What and how many, donate electrons to the 3-carbon intermediates?

What is 6 NADPH molecules

300

What happens to the remaining 5 G3P molecules

They get rearranged into 3 RuBP (5 caron molecules).

300

Why do we need more ATP than NADPH?

Need 9 ATP in total, only 6 NADPH, 3 additional ATP for regenreation stage

400

How many carbons in one RuBP?

What is 5?

400

Describe why this process needs ATP

Takes 6 phosphates to 3-carbon intermediates from carbon fixation to turn into 6 G3P molecules, ADP goes back to the light reactions.

400

What would happen if you did not have enough ATP in this step?

G3P would not be transformed back into RuBP

400

What is an alternative name for the Calvin cycle?

Light independent reactions

500

Describe carbon fixation

3 RuBP molecules get carbon from 3 CO2, which produces a 6-carbon intermediate that then splits in half. At the end of carbon fixation, we have 6 molecules of 3-carbon intermediates.

500

What does the electron transfer do in this stage?

Reduces the 3-carbon intermediates to allow phosphate to bond.

500

Use an analogy to explain regeneration step

Up to judges

500

Why might a student think that to make one glucose, you only need two cycles? Explain why it is 6.

3 RuBP are cycling at once, counts as 3 individual cycles, need 6 cycles therefore