the calvin cycle
Photosynthetic organisms make up the producer trophic level.
One or more of these known pigments is required to capture the energy of light and drive photosynthesis: Chlorophyll, Xanthophyll, Carotene, Phaeophytin, Phycobilin, Bacteriochlorophyll or Bacteriorhodopsin.
yes
The carbon fixing reactions that occur in photosynthesis is called the anaplerotic reaction. In most cases, the carbon fixing reactions usually occurs in the marine environments.
it occurs in the chloroplast / stroma oh and light reactions can only occur in a plant and some protists because only plants and some protists can perform photosynthesis, and it is in this process which light reactions occur. other cells don't have chloroplast and stromas.
apex: the Calvin cycle
light harvesting is a set of photosynthetic pigment molecules that absorb light and channel the energy to the photosynthetic reaction centre, where the light reactions of photosynthesis occur.
Photosynthetic organisms make up the producer trophic level.
One or more of these known pigments is required to capture the energy of light and drive photosynthesis: Chlorophyll, Xanthophyll, Carotene, Phaeophytin, Phycobilin, Bacteriochlorophyll or Bacteriorhodopsin.
yes
Carbon dioxide is one chemical that is needed in order for the metabolic reactions of photosynthesis to occur. The first stage of photosynthesis is a light reaction where energy from light is captured.
apex: the Calvin cycle
salt and water
it occurs in light independent reaction!!!
Chemosynthesis get energy from oxidation of inorganic substance, photosynthesis get energy from light. Chemosynthesis could occur just about anywhere there are enough suitable chemicals to oxidize, photosynthesis could only occur when there is sufficient light.
plantAlgae and some protozoans in kingdom protista are photosynthetic. Also some bacteria in kingdom monera are photosynthetic
This pigment is chlorophyll. It is struck by photons of light which excites it's electrons into a higher energy level where they enter photosystem II.