Photosynthesis induction varies along the canopies of Zea mays and Sorghum bicolor: linking fast responses and non-photochemical quenching relaxation to biomass production.

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Photosynthesis induction varies along the canopies of Zea mays and Sorghum bicolor: linking fast responses and non-photochemical quenching relaxation to biomass production.

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1294521
Fluorescence-based primary productivity estimates are influenced by non-photochemical quenching dynamics in Arctic phytoplankton.
  • Dec 7, 2023
  • Frontiers in Microbiology
  • Yayla Sezginer + 3 more

Chlorophyll fluorescence-based estimates of primary productivity typically include dark or low-light pre-treatments to relax non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), a process that influences the relationship between PSII photochemistry and fluorescence yields. The time-scales of NPQ relaxation vary significantly between phytoplankton taxa and across environmental conditions, creating uncertainty in field-based productivity measurements derived from fluorescence. To address this practical challenge, we used fast repetition rate fluorometry to characterize NPQ relaxation kinetics in Arctic Ocean phytoplankton assemblages across a range of hydrographic regimes. Applying numerical fits to our data, we derived NPQ relaxation life times, and determined the relative contributions of various quenching components to the total NPQ signature across the different assemblages. Relaxation kinetics were best described as a combination of fast-, intermediate- and slow-relaxing processes, operating on time-scales of seconds, minutes, and hours, respectively. Across sampling locations and depths, total fluorescence quenching was dominated by the intermediate quenching component. Our results demonstrated an average NPQ relaxation life time of 20 ± 1.9 min, with faster relaxation among high light acclimated surface samples relative to lowlight acclimated sub-surface samples. We also used our results to examine the influence of NPQ relaxation on estimates of photosynthetic electron transport rates (ETR), testing the commonly held assumption that NPQ exerts proportional effects on light absorption (PSII functional absorption cross section, σPSII) and photochemical quantum efficiency (FV/FM). This assumption was violated in a number of phytoplankton assemblages that showed a significant decoupling of σPSII and FV/FM during NPQ relaxation, and an associated variability in ETR estimates. Decoupling of σPSII and FV/FM was most prevalent in samples displaying symptoms photoinhibition. Our results provide insights into the mechanisms and kinetics of NPQ in Arctic phytoplankton assemblages, with important implications for the use of FRRF to derive non-invasive, high-resolution estimates of photosynthetic activity in polar marine waters.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1101/2025.01.12.632622
Modification of Non-photochemical Quenching Pathways in the C4 Model Plant Setaria viridis Revealed Shared and Unique Photoprotection Mechanisms as Compared to C3 Plants.
  • Jan 15, 2025
  • bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
  • Grace Milburn + 25 more

Light is essential for photosynthesis; however, excess light can increase the accumulation of photoinhibitory reactive oxygen species that reduce photosynthetic efficiency. Plants have evolved photoprotective non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) pathways to dissipate excess light energy. In tobacco and soybean (C3 plants), overexpression of three NPQ genes, violaxanthin de-epoxidase (VDE), Photosystem II Subunit S (PsbS), and zeaxanthin epoxidase (ZEP), hereafter VPZ, resulted in faster NPQ induction and relaxation kinetics, and increased crop yields in field conditions. NPQ is well-studied in C3 plants; however, NPQ and the translatability of the VPZ approach in C4 plants is poorly understood. The green foxtail Setaria viridis is an excellent model to study photosynthesis and photoprotection in C4 plants. To understand the regulation of NPQ and photosynthesis in C4 plants, we performed transient overexpression in Setaria protoplasts and generated (and employed) stable transgenic Setaria plants overexpressing one of the three Arabidopsis NPQ genes or all three NPQ genes (AtVPZ lines). Overexpressing (OE) AtVDE and AtZEP in Setaria produced similar results as in C3 plants, with increased or reduced zeaxanthin (thus NPQ), respectively. However, overexpressing AtPsbS appeared to be challenging in Setaria, with largely reduced NPQ in protoplasts and under-represented homozygous AtPsbS-OE lines, potentially due to competitive and tight heterodimerization of AtPsbS and SvPsbS proteins. Furthermore, Setaria AtVPZ lines had increased zeaxanthin, faster NPQ induction, higher NPQ level, but slower NPQ relaxation. Despite this, AtVPZ lines had improved growth as compared to wildtype under several conditions, especially high temperatures, which is not related to the faster relaxation of NPQ but may be attributable to increased zeaxanthin and NPQ in C4 plants. Our results identified shared and unique characteristics of the NPQ pathway in C4 model Setaria as compared to C3 plants and provide insights to improve C4 crop yields under fluctuating environmental conditions.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 22
  • 10.1093/plphys/kiab541
PTOX-dependent safety valve does not oxidize P700 during photosynthetic induction in the Arabidopsis pgr5 mutant.
  • Nov 18, 2021
  • Plant Physiology
  • Qi Zhou + 3 more

Plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) accepts electrons from plastoquinol to reduce molecular oxygen to water. We introduced the gene encoding Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr)PTOX2 into the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) wild-type (WT) and proton gradient regulation5 (pgr5) mutant defective in cyclic electron transport around photosystem I (PSI). The accumulation of CrPTOX2 only mildly affected photosynthetic electron transport in the WT background during steady-state photosynthesis but partly complemented the induction of nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) in the pgr5 background. During the induction of photosynthesis by actinic light (AL) of 130 µmol photons m-2 s-1, the high level of PSII yield (Y(II)) was induced immediately after the onset of AL in WT plants accumulating CrPTOX2. NPQ was more rapidly induced in the transgenic plants than in WT plants. P700 was also oxidized immediately after the onset of AL. Although CrPTOX2 does not directly induce a proton concentration gradient (ΔpH) across the thylakoid membrane, the coupled reaction of PSII generated ΔpH to induce NPQ and the downregulation of the cytochrome b6f complex. Rapid induction of Y(II) and NPQ was also observed in the pgr5 plants accumulating CrPTOX2. In contrast to the WT background, P700 was not oxidized in the pgr5 background. Although the thylakoid lumen was acidified by CrPTOX2, PGR5 was essential for oxidizing P700. In addition to acidification of the thylakoid lumen to downregulate the cytochrome b6f complex (donor-side regulation), PGR5 may be required for draining electrons from PSI by transferring them to the plastoquinone pool. We propose a reevaluation of the contribution of this acceptor-side regulation by PGR5 in the photoprotection of PSI.

  • Dissertation
  • 10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/724
Light energy management in peach: utilization, photoprotection , photodamage and recovery. Maximizing light absorption in orchard is not always the best solution
  • Apr 29, 2008
  • Pasquale Losciale

Light energy management in peach: utilization, photoprotection , photodamage and recovery. Maximizing light absorption in orchard is not always the best solution

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  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 62
  • 10.3389/fpls.2017.02094
The Dynamics of Energy Dissipation and Xanthophyll Conversion in Arabidopsis Indicate an Indirect Photoprotective Role of Zeaxanthin in Slowly Inducible and Relaxing Components of Non-photochemical Quenching of Excitation Energy
  • Dec 8, 2017
  • Frontiers in Plant Science
  • Eugen Kress + 1 more

The dynamics of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence and the dynamics of xanthophyll conversion under different actinic light conditions were studied in intact leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. NPQ induction was investigated during up to 180 min illumination at 450, 900, and 1,800 μmol photons m−2 s−1 (μE) and NPQ relaxation after 5, 30, 90, or 180 min of pre-illumination at the same light intensities. The comparison of wild-type plants with mutants affected either in xanthophyll conversion (npq1 and npq2) or PsbS expression (npq4 and L17) or lumen acidification (pgr1) indicated that NPQ states with similar, but not identical characteristics are induced at longer time range (15–60 min) in wild-type and mutant plants. In genotypes with an active xanthophyll conversion, the dynamics of two slowly (10–60 min) inducible and relaxing NPQ components were found to be kinetically correlated with zeaxanthin formation and epoxidation, respectively. However, the extent of NPQ was independent of the amount of zeaxanthin, since higher NPQ values were inducible with increasing actinic light intensities without pronounced changes in the zeaxanthin amount. These data support an indirect role of zeaxanthin in pH-independent NPQ states rather than a specific direct function of zeaxanthin as quencher in long-lasting NPQ processes. Such an indirect function might be related to an allosteric regulation of NPQ processes by zeaxanthin (e.g., through interaction of zeaxanthin at the surface of proteins) or a general photoprotective function of zeaxanthin in the lipid phase of the membrane (e.g., by modulation of the membrane fluidity or by acting as antioxidant). The found concomitant down-regulation of zeaxanthin epoxidation and recovery of photosystem II activity ensures that zeaxanthin is retained in the thylakoid membrane as long as photosystem II activity is inhibited or down-regulated. This regulation supports the view that zeaxanthin can be considered as a kind of light stress memory in chloroplasts, allowing a rapid reactivation of photoprotective NPQ processes in case of recurrent light stress periods.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 4
  • 10.3791/63485
High-Throughput Analysis of Non-Photochemical Quenching in Crops Using Pulse Amplitude Modulated Chlorophyll Fluorometry.
  • Jul 6, 2022
  • Journal of Visualized Experiments
  • Dhananjay Gotarkar + 5 more

Photosynthesis is not optimized in modern crop varieties, and therefore provides an opportunity for improvement. Speeding up the relaxation of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) has proven to be an effective strategy to increase photosynthetic performance. However, the potential to breed for improved NPQ and a complete understanding of the genetic basis of NPQ relaxation is lacking due to limitations of oversampling and data collection from field-grown crop plants. Building on previous reports, we present a high-throughput assay for analysis of NPQ relaxation rates in Glycine max (soybean) using pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) chlorophyll fluorometry. Leaf disks are sampled from field-grown soybeans before transportation to a laboratory where NPQ relaxation is measured in a closed PAM-fluorometer. NPQ relaxation parameters are calculated by fitting a bi-exponential function to the measured NPQ values following a transition from high to low light. Using this method, it is possible to test hundreds of genotypes within a day. The procedure has the potential to screen mutant and diversity panels for variation in NPQ relaxation, and can therefore be applied to both fundamental and applied research questions.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 102
  • 10.1111/tpj.14663
Photosynthesis in the fleeting shadows: an overlooked opportunity for increasing crop productivity?
  • Feb 1, 2020
  • The Plant Journal
  • Yu Wang + 3 more

SummaryPhotosynthesis measurements are traditionally taken under steady‐state conditions; however, leaves in crop fields experience frequent fluctuations in light and take time to respond. This slow response reduces the efficiency of carbon assimilation. Transitions from low to high light require photosynthetic induction, including the activation of Rubisco and the opening of stomata, whereas transitions from high to low light require the relaxation of dissipative energy processes, collectively known as non‐photochemical quenching (NPQ). Previous attempts to assess the impact of these delays on net carbon assimilation have used simplified models of crop canopies, limiting the accuracy of predictions. Here, we use ray tracing to predict the spatial and temporal dynamics of lighting for a rendered mature Glycine max (soybean) canopy to review the relative importance of these delays on net cumulative assimilation over the course of both a sunny and a cloudy summer day. Combined limitations result in a 13% reduction in crop carbon assimilation on both sunny and cloudy days, with induction being more important on cloudy than on sunny days. Genetic variation in NPQ relaxation rates and photosynthetic induction in parental lines of a soybean nested association mapping (NAM) population was assessed. Short‐term NPQ relaxation (<30 min) showed little variation across the NAM lines, but substantial variation was found in the speeds of photosynthetic induction, attributable to Rubisco activation. Over the course of a sunny and an intermittently cloudy day these would translate to substantial differences in total crop carbon assimilation. These findings suggest an unexplored potential for breeding improved photosynthetic potential in our major crops.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/tpj.17219
Variation in relaxation of non‐photochemical quenching between the founder genotypes of the soybean (Glycine max) nested association mapping population
  • Jan 1, 2025
  • The Plant Journal
  • Dhananjay Gotarkar + 12 more

SUMMARYImproving the efficiency of crop photosynthesis has the potential to increase yields. Genetic manipulation showed photosynthesis can be improved by speeding up the relaxation of photoprotective mechanisms during sun‐to‐shade transitions. However, it is unclear if natural variation in the relaxation of non‐photochemical quenching (NPQ) can be exploited in crop breeding programs. To address this issue, we measured six NPQ parameters in the 40 founder lines and common parent of a Soybean Nested Association Mapping (SoyNAM) panel over two field seasons in Illinois. Leaf disks were sampled from plants grown in the field, and induction and relaxation of NPQ were measured under controlled conditions. NPQ parameters did not show consistently variable trends throughout development, and variation between sampling days suggests environmental impacts on NPQ dynamics. Seventeen genotypes were found to show small but consistent differences in NPQ relaxation kinetics relative to a reference line, providing a basis for future mapping studies. Finally, a soybean canopy model predicted available phenotypic variation could result in a 1.6% difference in carbon assimilation when comparing the fastest and slowest relaxing NPQ values. No correlation could be found between yield and rates of NPQ relaxation, but a full test will require an analysis of isogenic lines.

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  • Book Chapter
  • Cite Count Icon 6
  • 10.19103/as.2022.0119.09
Relaxing non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) to improve photosynthesis in crops
  • Jan 10, 2023
  • Johannes Kromdijk + 1 more

Sunlight intercepted by crop plants drives photosynthesis and growth. However, the light-harvesting antenna complexes that capture light energy for photosynthesis can also absorb too much light, which enhances the formation for reactive oxygen species and can result in damage to photosynthetic reaction centres. In order to prevent excessive damage, light-harvesting efficiency is reduced under high light, via upregulation of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) processes involved in thermal dissipation of excitation energy in the photosystem II antennae. Relaxation of NPQ following high light exposure is not instantaneous and the response time increases with severity and longevity of the high light exposure. Due to slow NPQ relaxation, photosynthetic light use efficiency can be decreased for prolonged periods after high light exposure. In this chapter we review mechanistic understanding of light harvesting and NPQ, how NPQ can be measured and results from recent attempts to accelerate NPQ responses to light.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1017/s0024282921000323
Shade lichens are characterized by rapid relaxation of non-photochemical quenching on transition to darkness
  • Sep 1, 2021
  • The Lichenologist
  • Richard P Beckett + 2 more

Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) plays an important role in protecting photosynthetic organisms from photoinhibition by dissipating excess light energy as heat. However, excess NPQ can greatly reduce the quantum yield of photosynthesis at lower light levels. Recently, there has been considerable interest in understanding how plants balance NPQ to ensure optimal productivity in environments in which light levels are rapidly changing. In the present study, chlorophyll fluorescence was used to study the induction and relaxation of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) in the dark and the induction of photosynthesis in ten species of lichens, five sampled from exposed and five sampled from shaded habitats. Here we show that the main difference between sun and shade lichens is the rate at which NPQ relaxes in the dark, rather than the speed that photosynthesis starts upon illumination. During the first two minutes in the dark, NPQ values in the five sun species declined only by an average of 2%, while by contrast, in shade species the average decline was 40%. For lichens growing in microhabitats where light levels are rapidly changing, rapid relaxation of NPQ may enable their photobionts to use the available light most efficiently.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 41
  • 10.1007/s00425-011-1380-5
Acclimation- and mutation-induced enhancement of PsbS levels affects the kinetics of non-photochemical quenching in Arabidopsis thaliana
  • Feb 22, 2011
  • Planta
  • Ahmad Zia + 2 more

The efficiency of photosystem II antenna complexes (LHCs) in higher plants must be regulated to avoid potentially damaging overexcitation of the reaction centre in excess light. Regulation is achieved via a feedback mechanism known as non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), triggered the proton gradient (ΔpH) causing heat dissipation within the LHC antenna. ΔpH causes protonation of the LHCs, the PsbS protein and triggers the enzymatic de-epoxidation of the xanthophyll, violaxanthin, to zeaxanthin. A key step in understanding the mechanism is to decipher whether PsbS and zeaxanthin cooperate to promote NPQ. To obtain clues about their respective functions we studied the effects of PsbS and zeaxanthin on the rates of NPQ formation and relaxation in wild-type Arabidopsis leaves and those overexpressing PsbS (L17) or lacking zeaxanthin (npq1). Overexpression of PsbS was found to increase the rate of NPQ formation, as previously reported for zeaxanthin. However, PsbS overexpression also increased the rate of NPQ relaxation, unlike zeaxanthin, which is known decrease the rate. The enhancement of PsbS levels in plants lacking zeaxanthin (npq1) by either acclimation to high light or crossing with L17 plants showed that the effect of PsbS was independent of zeaxanthin. PsbS levels also affected the kinetics of the 535nm absorption change (ΔA535), which monitors the formation of the conformational state of the LHC antenna associated with NPQ, in an identical way. The antagonistic action of PsbS and zeaxanthin with respect to NPQ and ΔA535 relaxation kinetics suggests that the two molecules have distinct regulatory functions.

  • Preprint Article
  • 10.1101/2025.02.07.637181
Natural Variation in Photoprotection: Rapid NPQ Kinetics in Ferns
  • Feb 8, 2025
  • Nina M Maryn + 4 more

Land plants perform oxygenic photosynthesis but are unable to use all of the solar radiation that they absorb on a daily basis. To minimize the production of reactive oxygen species in excess light, photosynthetic organisms use non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) mechanisms to dissipate excess excitation energy. However, the on-off transition of these mechanisms is slower than the light fluctuations themselves. In high-to-low light transitions, this can be costly to the overall productivity and carbon gain of the organism across its lifetime, because useful light energy is wasted. Here, we characterize the rapid kinetics of NPQ found in species across the fern lineage. Most of the 23 examined fern species showed faster NPQ induction and faster and more complete NPQ relaxation. Curve fitting suggested that energy-dependent quenching was the dominant contributor to the kinetics. The xerophytic fernAstrolepis windhamiiexhibited rapid, dithiothreitol-resistant accumulation of zeaxanthin during NPQ induction, and it maintained low residual NPQ after NPQ relaxation, which however was not associated with rapid re-epoxidation of zeaxanthin. Rapid NPQ kinetics might have been an adaptive trait as ferns radiated in sunflecked forest understories during angiosperm diversification and expansion during the Cretaceous.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 2
  • 10.5897/ajb10.1130
Photosynthetic induction in leaves of two cucumber genotypes differing in sensitivity to low-light stress
  • Mar 21, 2011
  • AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY
  • X Sui + 7 more

Low light is one of the most important stress factors affecting cucumber production in China greenhouse. Two cucumber genotypes (Cucumis sativus L.), Deltastar with low light-tolerance and Jinyan No. 2 with low light-sensitivity were used to study the response of gas exchange, chlorophyll fluorescence, stomatal opening and ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activity to low light during photosynthetic induction. In this experiment, cucumber plants were exposed to 75 to 100 μmol·m -2 ·s -1 (control light 500 to 550 μmol·m -2 ·s -1 ) at 25 or 17°C (day/night) for 20 days. Photosynthetic induction was determined during cultivation after pre-dark 14 to 16 h. The results showed that there were stomatal and non-stomatal limitations (biochemical limitation) during induction of leaf photosynthesis. However, the biochemical limitation played a primary role in the early stage, but the stomatal limitation was predominant in the later stage during the whole photosynthetic induction. The time of net photosynthetic rate (P N ), stomatal conductance (g s ), actual photosystem II efficiency (Ф PSII ), linear electron transport rate (J) and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) to reach maximal levels (steady-state) of cucumber leaves acclimated to low-light displayed longer induction process when compared with that under control light condition. Moreover, Jinyan No. 2, the low light-sensitive genotype, showed a longer start time of photosynthesis (STP), lower P N , Ф PSII , degree of stomatal opening and Rubisco activation state, as well as higher NPQ than those of Deltastar. Key words : Cucumis sativus, low light, photosynthetic induction, chlorophyll a fluorescence, Rubisco, stomata.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1017/s0024282922000214
Adaptions of photosynthesis in sun and shade in populations of some Afromontane lichens
  • Sep 1, 2022
  • The Lichenologist
  • Kwanele Goodman Wandile Mkhize + 2 more

Photosynthetic organisms have evolved a great variety of mechanisms to optimize their use of sunlight. Some of the clearest examples of adaptations can be seen by comparing photosynthesis in different species and in different individuals of the same species that grow under high and low light levels. While the adaptations of sun and shade higher plants have been relatively well studied, much less information is available on the photobionts of lichenized Ascomycetes. An important adaptation that can protect photosynthetic organisms from the potentially harmful effects of excess light is non-photochemical quenching (NPQ); NPQ can dissipate unused light energy as heat. Here we used chlorophyll fluorescence to compare the induction and relaxation of NPQ and the induction of electron transport (rETR) in collections of the same lichen species from exposed and from more shaded locations. All species have trebouxioid photobionts and normally grow in more exposed microhabitats but can also be readily collected from more shaded locations. Shade forms display generally higher NPQ, presumably to protect lichens from occasional rapid increases in light that occur during sunflecks. Furthermore, the NPQ of shade forms relaxes quickly when light levels are reduced, presumably to ensure efficient photosynthesis after a sunfleck has passed. The maximal relative electron transport rate is lower in shade than sun collections, probably reflecting a downregulation of photosynthetic capacity to reduce energy costs. We also compared collections of pale and melanized thalli from three species of shade lichens with Symbiochloris as their photobiont. Interestingly, NPQ in melanized thalli from slightly more exposed microhabitats induced and relaxed in a way that resembled shade rather than sun forms of the trebouxioid lichens. This might suggest that in some locations melanization induced during a temporary period of high light may be excessive and could potentially reduce photosynthesis later in the growing season. Taken together, the results suggest that lichen photobionts can flexibly adjust the amount and type of NPQ, and their levels of rETR in response to light availability.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 28
  • 10.1080/09670262.2017.1397197
Behavioural versus physiological photoprotection in epipelic and epipsammic benthic diatoms
  • Feb 8, 2018
  • European Journal of Phycology
  • Lander Blommaert + 3 more

ABSTRACTBenthic diatoms are dominant primary producers in intertidal marine sediments, which are characterized by widely fluctuating and often extreme light conditions. To cope with sudden increases in light intensity, benthic diatoms display both behavioural and physiological photoprotection mechanisms. Behavioural photoprotection is restricted to raphid pennate diatoms, which possess a raphe system that enables motility and hence positioning in sediment light gradients (e.g. via vertical migration into the sediment). The main physiological photoprotection mechanism is to dissipate excess light energy as heat, measured as Non-Photochemical Quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence. A trade-off between vertical migration and physiological photoprotection (NPQ) in benthic diatoms has been hypothesized before, but this has never been formally tested. We exposed five epipelic diatom species (which move in between sediment particles) and four epipsammic diatom species (which live in close association with individual sand grains) to high light conditions, and characterized both NPQ and the relative magnitude of the migratory response to high light. Our results reveal the absence of a significant downward migratory response in an araphid diatom, but also in several raphid epipsammic diatoms, while all epipelic species showed a significant migratory response upon high light exposure. In all epipsammic species the upregulation of NPQ was rapid and pronounced; NPQ relaxation in low light conditions, however, occurred faster in the araphid diatom, compared with the raphid epipsammic species. In contrast, all epipelic species lacked a strong and flexible NPQ response and showed higher susceptibility to photodamage when not able to migrate. While overall our results support the vertical migration-NPQ trade-off, the lack of strong relationships between the capacity for vertical migration and NPQ within the epipsammic and epipelic groups suggests that other factors as well, such as cell size, substrate type and photoacclimation, may influence photoprotective strategies.

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