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  2. Chlorophyll b - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorophyll_b

    Chlorophyll b is a form of chlorophyll. Chlorophyll b helps in photosynthesis by absorbing light energy. It is more soluble than chlorophyll a in polar solvents because of its carbonyl group. Its color is green, and it primarily absorbs blue light. [2] In land plants, the light-harvesting antennae around photosystem II contain the majority of ...

  3. Chlorophyll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorophyll

    Chlorophyll b is made by the same enzyme acting on chlorophyllide b. The same is known for chlorophyll d and f, both made from corresponding chlorophyllides ultimately made from chlorophyllide a. [39] In Angiosperm plants, the later steps in the biosynthetic pathway are light-dependent. Such plants are pale if grown in darkness.

  4. Photosynthetic pigment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthetic_pigment

    Chlorophyll a: a blue-green pigment; Chlorophyll b: a yellow-green pigment; Chlorophyll a is the most common of the six, present in every plant that performs photosynthesis. Each pigment absorbs light more efficiently in a different part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Chlorophyll a absorbs well in the ranges of 400–450 nm and at 650–700 ...

  5. Phycocyanin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phycocyanin

    Phycocyanin is a pigment-protein complex from the light-harvesting phycobiliprotein family, along with allophycocyanin and phycoerythrin. [1] It is an accessory pigment to chlorophyll . All phycobiliproteins are water-soluble, so they cannot exist within the membrane like carotenoids can.

  6. Chloroplast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chloroplast

    Other forms of chlorophyll exist, such as the accessory pigments chlorophyll b, chlorophyll c, chlorophyll d, [12] and chlorophyll f. Chlorophyll b is an olive green pigment found only in the chloroplasts of plants, green algae, any secondary chloroplasts obtained through the secondary endosymbiosis of a green alga, and a few cyanobacteria. [12 ...

  7. Chlorin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorin

    In organic chemistry, chlorins are tetrapyrrole pigments that are partially hydrogenated porphyrins. [1] The parent chlorin is an unstable compound which undergoes air oxidation to porphine. [2] The name chlorin derives from chlorophyll. Chlorophylls are magnesium-containing chlorins and occur as photosynthetic pigments in chloroplasts. The ...

  8. Biological pigment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_pigment

    It is the presence and relative abundance of chlorophyll that gives plants their green color. All land plants and green algae possess two forms of this pigment: chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b. Kelps, diatoms, and other photosynthetic heterokonts contain chlorophyll c instead of b, while red algae possess only chlorophyll a. All chlorophylls ...

  9. Photosynthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthesis

    The former is known as PSII, the latter is PSI. PSI contains only chlorophyll "a", PSII contains primarily chlorophyll "a" with most of the available chlorophyll "b", among other pigments. These include phycobilins, which are the red and blue pigments of red and blue algae, respectively, and fucoxanthol for brown algae and diatoms.