Abstract: | In different marine red algae (Chondrus crispus, Delesseria sanguinea, Membranoptera alata, Phycodrys rubens, Phyllophora truncata, Polyneura hilliae) photoinhibition of photosynthesis has been investigated by means of both fluorescence and oxygen measurements. Measurements of absolute oxygen production show that photoinhibition causes a decline in the initial slope and in the rate of bending of the fluence rate-response curve (i.e. the photosynthetic efficiency at non-saturating fluence rates), as well as a decline in the photosynthetic capacity (Pm) at saturating fluence rates. Fluorescence data (Fv/Fm) were consistent with the results of oxygen measurements. Under excessive light photoinhibition protects photosynthesis against photo-damage in red algae. However, an increase in the initial fluorescence (Fo) after photoinhibitory treatment indicates that it could not prevent photodamage entirely. Action spectra of photoinhibition demonstrate that the main photoinhibition site in Polyneura hiliae is PS II, because far red light absorbed by PS I was ineffective. The strong increase of Fo in the blue wavelength range and the slight and partial recovery in weak blue light indicate that blue light especially causes photodamage. Recovery of photosynthesis requires dim white light conditions. Experiments with monochromatic light also show a wavelength dependence of recovery. Moreover, the recovery of photosynthesis after a photoinhibitory treatment is strongly temperature dependent, indicating participation of enzymatic processes. The comparison of fluorescence and oxygen measurement of the recovery shows different results in some species. The rate of oxygen production in red control light increased immediately after photoinhibited algae were exposed to weak light conditions. Surprisingly, the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) of Phyllophora truncata and the maximum fluorescence (Fm) of Polyneura hilliae show first a delay of the recovery under weak light conditions. Thus, in recovery experiments fluorescence and oxygen data are not quite consistent. |