301. Which statement best explains the principle of limiting factors in photosynthesis?
ⓐ. Photosynthesis always depends equally on all external factors at the same time
ⓑ. The rate of photosynthesis is controlled by the factor that is least favorable at a given moment
ⓒ. The process stops unless every factor is present at its maximum value
ⓓ. Only one factor, usually light, controls photosynthesis under all conditions
Correct Answer: The rate of photosynthesis is controlled by the factor that is least favorable at a given moment
Explanation: The principle of limiting factors states that when several factors influence a process, the overall rate is governed by the one that is in shortest effective supply. In photosynthesis, light, carbon dioxide, temperature, water, and minerals all matter, but only the most limiting one controls the rate at a particular time. Even if other factors are available in abundance, they cannot fully increase the rate while one essential factor remains inadequate. This concept helps explain why photosynthesis does not always rise simply by increasing one condition. It also shows why plant responses vary from one environment to another. Therefore, the least favorable factor determines the rate at a given moment.
302. As light intensity increases from a very low level, the rate of photosynthesis generally:
ⓐ. decreases immediately because strong light destroys chlorophyll
ⓑ. remains completely unchanged until carbon dioxide rises
ⓒ. falls first and then rises after temperature becomes favorable
ⓓ. increases up to a point and then levels off when another factor becomes limiting
Correct Answer: increases up to a point and then levels off when another factor becomes limiting
Explanation: At low light intensity, light acts as a major limiting factor, so increasing it raises the rate of photosynthesis. However, this increase does not continue indefinitely. After a certain point, some other factor such as carbon dioxide concentration or temperature becomes limiting. When that happens, further increase in light does not produce a corresponding rise in photosynthetic rate. This creates a leveling-off pattern known as light saturation. The response therefore reflects interaction among multiple controlling factors. Hence, the correct statement is that the rate increases at first and later levels off.
303. Which light colors are generally most effective in driving photosynthesis in green plants?
ⓐ. Red and blue
ⓑ. Green and yellow
ⓒ. Orange and green
ⓓ. Yellow and brown
Correct Answer: Red and blue
Explanation: Green plants absorb light most effectively in the red and blue regions of the visible spectrum because their pigments, especially chlorophylls, show strong absorption there. Since photosynthesis depends on the energy absorbed by these pigments, red and blue light usually support a higher photosynthetic rate than green light. Green light is less effective because much of it is reflected or transmitted, which is why leaves appear green. The relationship between pigment absorption and photosynthetic rate explains the special importance of red and blue light. This is a foundational idea when studying light as a factor affecting photosynthesis. Therefore, red and blue are the most effective colors.
304. The term light saturation point in photosynthesis refers to the stage at which:
ⓐ. chlorophyll is completely destroyed by light
ⓑ. all stomata close because of excess radiation
ⓒ. further increase in light intensity does not significantly increase the rate of photosynthesis
ⓓ. carbon dioxide enters the leaf faster than oxygen can leave
Correct Answer: further increase in light intensity does not significantly increase the rate of photosynthesis
Explanation: Light saturation point is reached when light is no longer the limiting factor for photosynthesis. At this stage, the available light is already sufficient to support the maximum rate possible under the existing conditions. If light intensity is increased beyond this point, the rate does not rise much because some other factor begins to limit the process. This concept helps explain why photosynthesis has an upper response range to light instead of increasing without end. It also shows the practical importance of factor interaction. Therefore, the light saturation point is the stage where more light no longer causes a significant increase.
305. Increasing carbon dioxide concentration around a photosynthesizing leaf generally raises the rate of photosynthesis until:
ⓐ. water becomes a raw material again
ⓑ. another factor becomes limiting
ⓒ. chlorophyll changes into carotenoids
ⓓ. oxygen stops being released from the leaf
Correct Answer: another factor becomes limiting
Explanation: Carbon dioxide is a raw material of photosynthesis, so increasing its concentration generally stimulates the process when it is in short supply. This effect continues only up to the point where carbon dioxide is no longer the most limiting factor. After that, some other factor such as light intensity, temperature, or enzyme capacity restricts the rate. As a result, the curve rises and then tends to level off instead of increasing endlessly. This pattern is a classic example of the law of limiting factors. Therefore, the correct statement is that the increase continues until another factor becomes limiting.
306. Temperature affects photosynthesis mainly because:
ⓐ. it changes the mineral content of the soil into glucose
ⓑ. it determines whether water can enter xylem vessels
ⓒ. it directly acts as the carbon source for sugar formation
ⓓ. many steps of photosynthesis are enzyme-controlled and therefore temperature-sensitive
Correct Answer: many steps of photosynthesis are enzyme-controlled and therefore temperature-sensitive
Explanation: Photosynthesis includes a series of biochemical reactions, and many of them depend on enzymes, especially in the carbon-fixation phase. Enzymes function best within a certain temperature range, so the rate of photosynthesis usually rises with temperature up to an optimum point. Beyond that optimum, the rate may decline because enzyme efficiency falls or metabolic balance is disturbed. This is why temperature has such a strong influence on photosynthetic performance. It does not act as a raw material, but it affects the speed and success of enzyme-mediated reactions. Therefore, temperature matters mainly because photosynthesis is largely enzyme-controlled.
307. Water shortage reduces photosynthesis most directly because it often:
ⓐ. causes stomata to close and lowers carbon dioxide entry into the leaf
ⓑ. increases chlorophyll synthesis inside the chloroplast
ⓒ. converts bundle sheath cells into mesophyll cells
ⓓ. replaces carbon dioxide as the main substrate of the Calvin cycle
Correct Answer: causes stomata to close and lowers carbon dioxide entry into the leaf
Explanation: Although water is one of the raw materials of photosynthesis, the immediate effect of water shortage is often indirect rather than simple exhaustion of substrate. When a plant experiences water deficit, stomata tend to close to reduce water loss through transpiration. This closure also restricts the entry of carbon dioxide into the leaf. Since carbon dioxide is essential for carbon fixation, the rate of photosynthesis decreases. Thus, water stress commonly reduces photosynthesis by limiting gas exchange and carbon dioxide availability. This is one of the most important physiological effects of drought on plants. Therefore, stomatal closure and reduced carbon dioxide entry form the correct explanation.
308. Why does stomatal closure reduce the rate of photosynthesis?
ⓐ. It prevents chloroplasts from absorbing blue light
ⓑ. It blocks ATP synthesis in the thylakoid membrane directly
ⓒ. It reduces the diffusion of carbon dioxide into the leaf
ⓓ. It causes oxygen to disappear from mesophyll cells
Correct Answer: It reduces the diffusion of carbon dioxide into the leaf
Explanation: Stomata are the main openings through which carbon dioxide enters the leaf from the atmosphere. When stomata close, carbon dioxide diffusion into the internal tissues becomes restricted. Since carbon dioxide is a necessary raw material for the Calvin cycle, reduced entry lowers the rate of photosynthesis. The effect is especially important under drought or high-temperature conditions, when stomatal closure is more common. This shows how leaf gas exchange is closely connected with photosynthetic efficiency. The limitation is therefore one of substrate access rather than direct pigment damage. Hence, reduced carbon dioxide diffusion is the correct reason.
309. Minerals influence photosynthesis mainly because they are required for:
ⓐ. the formation of chlorophyll and the proper functioning of many photosynthetic enzymes
ⓑ. converting oxygen directly into glucose in the leaf
ⓒ. replacing light energy in the chloroplast
ⓓ. making stomata unnecessary for carbon dioxide entry
Correct Answer: the formation of chlorophyll and the proper functioning of many photosynthetic enzymes
Explanation: Mineral nutrients play an essential supportive role in photosynthesis. Some minerals contribute to chlorophyll formation, while others are needed for enzymes and metabolic processes involved in light capture and carbon fixation. If these minerals are deficient, the photosynthetic apparatus cannot function normally. The result may be reduced chlorophyll content, weaker enzyme activity, and lower efficiency of food synthesis. Thus, minerals do not replace light or carbon dioxide, but they are vital for maintaining the machinery that performs photosynthesis. Their influence is therefore indirect but fundamental. Hence, the correct statement is that minerals support chlorophyll formation and enzyme function.
310. Which statement best describes the effect of temperature on the rate of photosynthesis?
ⓐ. The rate always decreases as temperature rises
ⓑ. The rate is completely independent of temperature in green plants
ⓒ. The rate rises continuously with temperature without any upper limit
ⓓ. The rate usually increases to an optimum and then declines if temperature becomes too high
Correct Answer: The rate usually increases to an optimum and then declines if temperature becomes too high
Explanation: Photosynthesis usually becomes faster as temperature rises from a low level because enzyme-controlled reactions proceed more efficiently. However, this increase continues only up to an optimum temperature range. Beyond that point, the rate begins to decline because enzymes may lose efficiency and metabolic balance becomes disturbed. This gives photosynthesis a characteristic optimum temperature response rather than a straight line of endless increase. The exact optimum may vary among plants, but the general pattern remains similar. Therefore, the correct description is that the rate increases to an optimum and then falls at excessively high temperature.
311. If a leaf is exposed to intense light but carbon dioxide concentration remains very low, the rate of photosynthesis will remain limited mainly by:
ⓐ. carbon dioxide availability
ⓑ. light intensity
ⓒ. chlorophyll quantity alone
ⓓ. oxygen release from the leaf
Correct Answer: carbon dioxide availability
Explanation: When light is already abundant, it may no longer be the limiting factor for photosynthesis. In such a case, if carbon dioxide concentration is still very low, the Calvin cycle cannot proceed at a high rate because one of its raw materials is insufficient. This means the overall rate remains restricted by carbon dioxide availability despite strong illumination. The situation clearly demonstrates the law of limiting factors. Increasing a non-limiting factor does not raise the rate when some other essential factor is still deficient. Therefore, carbon dioxide becomes the main limiting factor under these conditions.
312. Which statement best explains why mineral deficiency may reduce photosynthesis even when light, water, and carbon dioxide are adequate?
ⓐ. Minerals directly replace the need for ATP in carbon fixation
ⓑ. Minerals are unnecessary once chloroplasts are formed
ⓒ. Minerals affect the photosynthetic machinery, including pigments and enzymes needed for the process
ⓓ. Minerals convert stomata into photosynthetic pores
Correct Answer: Minerals affect the photosynthetic machinery, including pigments and enzymes needed for the process
Explanation: Even when the major external factors appear favorable, photosynthesis can still decline if the internal machinery of the process is impaired. Mineral nutrients are essential components for the formation and functioning of chlorophyll, enzymes, and other biochemical systems involved in photosynthesis. If minerals are deficient, the plant may be unable to maintain these systems properly. As a result, the rate of photosynthesis falls despite adequate light, water, and carbon dioxide. This shows that external resources alone are not enough without proper nutritional support. Therefore, mineral deficiency reduces photosynthesis because it damages the machinery of the process.
313. Which factor is most directly responsible for providing the carbon atoms that finally appear in photosynthetic carbohydrates?
ⓐ. Water
ⓑ. Carbon dioxide
ⓒ. Light
ⓓ. Temperature
Correct Answer: Carbon dioxide
Explanation: The carbon atoms in photosynthetic carbohydrates originate mainly from carbon dioxide absorbed from the atmosphere. During the Calvin cycle, carbon dioxide is fixed into organic compounds and gradually converted into carbohydrate molecules. Water contributes hydrogen and plays other important roles, but it is not the main source of the carbon skeleton of sugars. Light supplies energy and temperature influences reaction rate, yet neither provides the carbon atoms themselves. This distinction is essential for understanding the role of each factor in photosynthesis. Therefore, carbon dioxide is the factor most directly responsible for supplying the carbon atoms in carbohydrates.
314. A greenhouse crop is already receiving strong light and adequate water, but its photosynthetic rate remains low because the air inside is poor in carbon dioxide. Which change would most directly increase the rate of photosynthesis?
ⓐ. Raising humidity only
ⓑ. Decreasing mineral supply
ⓒ. Reducing leaf area
ⓓ. Enriching the air with carbon dioxide
Correct Answer: Enriching the air with carbon dioxide
Explanation: Carbon dioxide is a direct raw material for photosynthesis and can become the limiting factor even when light and water are sufficient. In the situation described, the plant already has enough light energy to support a higher rate, but it cannot use that potential because carbon dioxide is in short supply. Increasing carbon dioxide concentration would provide more substrate for carbon fixation. This would allow the photosynthetic machinery to work at a higher rate until some other factor becomes limiting. Such enrichment is a common practical method used in protected cultivation. Therefore, enriching the air with carbon dioxide is the most direct way to increase the rate.
315. Assertion: When one factor is strongly limiting, increasing another favorable factor may produce little or no rise in the rate of photosynthesis. Reason: The overall rate depends on the factor that is least favorable at that time.
ⓐ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason is the correct explanation of Assertion
ⓑ. Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason is not the correct explanation of Assertion
ⓒ. Assertion is true, but Reason is false
ⓓ. Assertion is false, but Reason is true
Correct Answer: Both Assertion and Reason are true, and Reason is the correct explanation of Assertion
Explanation: The assertion is correct because photosynthesis cannot rise significantly when its most limiting requirement remains inadequate. Even if other conditions are improved, the limiting factor continues to restrict the overall process. The reason is also correct because this is exactly the principle of limiting factors in plant physiology. The rate is controlled by the factor in shortest effective supply at that moment. This explains why more light, water, or carbon dioxide may not help if another requirement is still deficient. Therefore, both statements are true, and the reason correctly explains the assertion.
316. A student says, “As long as light intensity is high, photosynthesis will always remain high.” Which correction is most accurate?
ⓐ. The statement is correct because light is always the only controlling factor
ⓑ. The statement is correct because carbon dioxide matters only in darkness
ⓒ. The statement is incorrect because once light is sufficient, other factors such as carbon dioxide or temperature may become limiting
ⓓ. The statement is incorrect because high light always stops chlorophyll from functioning
Correct Answer: The statement is incorrect because once light is sufficient, other factors such as carbon dioxide or temperature may become limiting
Explanation: Light is essential for photosynthesis, but it is not the only factor controlling the rate. At low intensity, light may indeed be the major limiting factor. However, once enough light is available, the rate may stop increasing because some other requirement, such as carbon dioxide concentration or suitable temperature, becomes limiting. This is why the rate eventually levels off at the light saturation point. The student’s statement ignores the interaction among multiple factors. Therefore, the correct correction is that high light alone does not guarantee a continuously high rate of photosynthesis.
317. The light compensation point of a leaf is reached when:
ⓐ. the rate of photosynthesis becomes maximum under strong light
ⓑ. the carbon dioxide fixed in photosynthesis equals the carbon dioxide released in respiration
ⓒ. the amount of chlorophyll becomes equal in palisade and spongy tissues
ⓓ. the stomata are fully open and water loss is highest
Correct Answer: the carbon dioxide fixed in photosynthesis equals the carbon dioxide released in respiration
Explanation: The light compensation point is the light intensity at which photosynthetic gain just balances respiratory loss. At this stage, the amount of carbon dioxide fixed by photosynthesis is equal to the amount released through respiration. As a result, there is no net gain of dry matter or net gaseous exchange in favor of photosynthesis. This point is important because below it, the plant loses more carbon than it gains. Above it, net photosynthesis becomes positive. Therefore, the light compensation point is correctly defined by equality between photosynthetic carbon fixation and respiratory carbon dioxide release.
318. A water-stressed plant is watered again, but its photosynthetic rate still remains poor because the soil is severely deficient in essential mineral nutrients. Which explanation best fits this observation?
ⓐ. Mineral deficiency can still limit photosynthesis by affecting pigments and enzyme systems even after water becomes available
ⓑ. Watering converts all mineral deficiencies directly into carbon dioxide shortage
ⓒ. Once water is restored, minerals no longer influence photosynthesis
ⓓ. Minerals affect only root growth and never leaf metabolism
Correct Answer: Mineral deficiency can still limit photosynthesis by affecting pigments and enzyme systems even after water becomes available
Explanation: Restoring water supply may remove one limitation, but it does not automatically correct other deficiencies. Mineral nutrients are needed for chlorophyll formation and for the proper functioning of many enzymes involved in photosynthesis. If these nutrients remain inadequate, the photosynthetic machinery cannot operate efficiently even after the plant is rewatered. This is a clear example of one limiting factor replacing another. The recovery of photosynthesis therefore depends on both hydration and nutritional condition. Hence, mineral deficiency can still limit photosynthesis after water becomes available.
319. Under adequate light and sufficient carbon dioxide, the rate of photosynthesis rises as temperature increases from low values but later declines at very high temperature. What best explains the decline?
ⓐ. Carbon dioxide stops existing in the air at high temperature
ⓑ. Light energy can no longer enter the chloroplast above the optimum temperature
ⓒ. Water permanently disappears from all mesophyll cells at moderate heat
ⓓ. Photosynthetic metabolism is enzyme-dependent, so excessively high temperature disturbs optimal enzymatic functioning
Correct Answer: Photosynthetic metabolism is enzyme-dependent, so excessively high temperature disturbs optimal enzymatic functioning
Explanation: Many steps of photosynthesis, especially those involved in carbon fixation, depend on enzymes. As temperature rises from low values, these reactions generally become faster up to an optimum range. Beyond that range, enzyme efficiency declines and metabolic coordination becomes disrupted. This causes the rate of photosynthesis to fall even if light and carbon dioxide remain available. Thus, the temperature response is not unlimited but follows an optimum pattern. The decline at high temperature is therefore best explained by disturbance of enzyme-controlled reactions. That is why option D is correct.
320. Which of the following is the best non-example of the principle of limiting factors in photosynthesis?
ⓐ. Carbon dioxide enrichment increases the rate only until some other factor becomes limiting
ⓑ. Strong light fails to increase the rate further when carbon dioxide remains very low
ⓒ. Improving water availability helps only if another factor is not more limiting
ⓓ. Increasing any single favorable factor will always raise the photosynthetic rate indefinitely
Correct Answer: Increasing any single favorable factor will always raise the photosynthetic rate indefinitely
Explanation: The principle of limiting factors states that the photosynthetic rate is controlled by the factor least favorable at a given time. This means improvement in one factor helps only until another factor becomes limiting. The idea that increasing any one factor will always keep raising the rate ignores the interacting nature of the process. In reality, photosynthesis does not respond without limit to one condition alone. The rate eventually levels off when another requirement restricts it. Therefore, the claim of indefinite increase from any single factor is the best non-example of the limiting factor principle.