Limiting Factors - Photosynthesis (OCR GCSE Biology A (Gateway))
Revision Note
Limiting Factors
Higher Tier Only
Interaction of two factors
More than one limiting factor can have an effect on the rate of photosynthesis
Graphs may show the effect of two factors interacting:
The rate of photosynthesis increases with increasing light intensity, temperature and carbon dioxide
At both temperatures tested the rate of photosynthesis is limited by low light intensity - as demonstrated by the lines showing the same rate
As the light intensity increases the rate of photosynthesis at 15℃ is lower than 25℃
Both lines level off, this shows that light intensity is no longer the limiting factor
Interaction of three factors
Graphs may show the interactions between three different factors, the graph below shows the relationship between temperature, carbon dioxide as light intensity is increased:
The rate of photosynthesis increases with increasing light intensity, temperature and carbon dioxide
All three experiments level-off when light intensity is no longer the limiting factor
Experiment 1 (red line) has the highest temperature and concentration of carbon dioxide so the rate of photosynthesis is much higher
In experiment 2 (blue line), the concentration of carbon dioxide is the limiting factor
The results of this experiment demonstrate that the rate of photosynthesis is controlled by carbon dioxide levels
The inverse square law
The inverse square law shows the relationship between light intensity and distance.
As the distance from the lamp increases the light intensity decreases
Light intensity and distance (from the light source) are inversely proportional to each other
This means that as the distance doubles the intensity of the light will be four times less
This is called the inverse square law and shown by the equation below:
Worked Example
Calculate the light intensity when the distance of the plant is 30 cm from the lamp
Answer:
Step 1: Use the equation
Light intensity = 1/d2
Step 2: Substitute the values you know
Light intensity = 1/302
Step 3: Calculate the light intensity
Light intensity = 0.001 a.u. (arbitrary units)
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