Abstract: | In green algae several characteristic differences in the slope of the fast 685 nm fluorescence transient indicate the existence of different mechanisms for the regulation of the photosynthetic electron transport in vivo with respect to the requirements for ATP and NADPH. Autotrophically cultivated Chlamydobotrys stellata exhibits a normal time curve of the fluorescence yield. Anaerobiosis and C02-deficiency raise the O-, I- and S-level, whereas the P- level is lowered and the I-D-decay disappears. The readdition of oxygen increases the fluorescence significantly. Supplementation of aerobic cells with CO2 restores the normal fluorescence transients. The replacement of carbon dioxide by acetate as a carbon source in the light lowers the overall fluorescence emission and abolishes the D-P-increase and the P-S-decline. The presence of DCMU increases fluorescence only at high intensities of incedent light. Anaerobiosis in these photoheterotrophic algae lowers the fluorescence emission. In this case DCMU increases fluorescence even at low light intensities. In Gonium multicoccum, which shows a normal fluorescence transient when cultivated autotrophically, CO2-deficiency abolishes the O-level and increases the I- and S-niveau. Additional anaerobiosis in CO2-deficient cells raises the steady state emission. Readdition of oxygen to these cells raises the I- and S-level even more and prevents the build up of the P-level. In Gonium |