Biology 1002B Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Carbon Fixation, Cellular Respiration, Chlamydomonas

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21 Aug 2017
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We can measure cellular respiration by the consumption of o2 and through the production of co2. We can also measure o2 produced at psii. Co2 is being produced by the mitochondrion and consumed by the chloroplast. We get a flask of chlamydomonas cell and a co2 analyzer that measures the change in co2 and lights. We should have about 108 cells / ml. Rate is measured in micro/milli moles of carbon per cell per unit time. How one can distinguish between gas exchanges in mitochondria from that taking place in the chloroplast of a chlamydomonas cell. By turning off the lights, and then we can see the co2 made in the mitochondria and the chloroplast won"t use it up. Identify major parts of a light response curve for carbon fixation. Light intensity vs co2 fixation rate is what the curve is made of. In the dark there is no carbon fixation, as a matter of fact the amount of.

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