The calvin cycle phases photosynthesis represents a crucial metabolic pathway occurring in the stroma, involving carbon fixation, reduction, and RuBP regeneration ATP NADPH consumption to produce carbohydrates.
- The cycle consists of three distinct phases: carbon fixation (CO₂ attachment to RuBP), reduction (using ATP and NADPH), and RuBP regeneration
- Each complete cycle requires three CO₂ molecules and produces one G3P molecule
- The process consumes 9 ATP and 6 NADPH molecules for net synthesis
- Alternative pathways like CAM plants carbon fixation help plants adapt to challenging environments
- Photorespiration occurs when oxygen interferes with the normal carbon fixation process