- Joined
- Aug 24, 2016
- Messages
- 1,661
- Reaction score
- 2,560
No, it isn't. Now you are repeating your most irritating statement, showing that I didn't get you wrong. Follow my links. (The second one isn't working, try this one or this one.) It is long known that carotenoids are the majority of light harvesting pigments in the LHC of antennae. There are a few hundred pigment molecules in antennae per reaction center.Now the million dollar question is - are corals brown colour a prove that carotenoids is the main contributor to photosynthesis below high light intensity or is it something else - like sunscreen. If we go back and try to define what a colour is
You can even read directly form the action spectra of photosynthesis of microalgae that caroteinoids must be involved in photosynthesis. If carotenoids would have only protective function, there would not be the high efficiency with which blue-green light drives photosynthesis.
I know the publications of Wiedenmann. In its core it says, if phosphate concentration is low, nitrate is particularly damaging. It is the same what the dissertation of Shantz and what I say.It may shed some light on these findings
Yes, this is just one of several mechanisms causing the "preference" for ammonium. This is exactly what I have stated.I did not claim otherwise - I just say that the authors suggest that ammonium may inhibit the actual enzyme for NO3 conversion into NH3/NH4. That means that if both NH3/NH4 and NO3 exist - the NO3 uptake should not happen regardless. There was no discussion about competition about the same transporter either from me or from the authors.
I mean, we don't have to go too much into the biochemical details, they are over the heads of most readers anyways. There are at least two mechanisms explaining the preference for ammonium, one at low and one at higher ammonium concentrations.
Last edited: