A System Approach to Fluorescence Induction in Green Leaves

Abstract
Intact green oat leaves (Avena saliva) were irradiated with modulated exciting light. Ai the application of initial square pulses of exciting light, the fluorescence induction pattern will change, but after some repeated pulses the fluorescence response pattern stabilizes and becomes identical. This periodic stimulation gave a better resolution of the two peaks constituting the fast fluorescence transient (the DPS region) compared to a single light pulse. The first peak could be depressed by weak light of wavelengths up to about 740 nm, given between the intense light phases of the pulse, while this treatment did not alter the second peak. The intensity of the higher light level of the pulse as well as the frequency were systematically varied. The results are tentatively rationalized in the form of sequential relaxation processes within the frame of the Hill‐Bendull scheme, leading to the possibility of two substances, one belonging to Photosystem II and the other to Photosystem I. underlying the two peaks in the DPS region of the fluorescence induction curve.

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