Abstract: | The photoreceptors involved in the photosynthetic acclimation of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) to increased irradiance were investigated. Plants were transferred from 100 p.mol m?2 s?1 cool white fluorescent light to higher irradiances of white light or white light supplemented with blue, red, green or yellow light. In these experiements light of all wavelengths tested was capable of causing acclimation as measured by the rate of light-saturated photosynthesis. It was concluded that the photosynthetic system rather than the blue-absorbing photoreceptor or phytochrome system acts as the photoreceptor for increased irradiance. No acclimation was observed in response to increased CO2 levels, but increasing light integral at a constant irradiance was effective in bringing about acclimation. We conclude that acclimation is a response to increased photosynthetic light capture rather than increased photosynthetic carbon fixation, and involves a photon counting mechanism. |