Question
A tricky NEET-style problem on factors affecting photosynthesis: given that rate depends on light, CO₂, temperature, water, and that one of the supporting components (Blackman’s law) is blocked by a specific inhibitor, predict the downstream effect on the whole system.
Solution — Step by Step
The inhibitor targets Blackman’s law, which normally rate is set by the factor in shortest supply. So the function carried out by this component is now unavailable to the system.
Without Blackman’s law, the next step in the pathway cannot proceed. Substrate piles up upstream; product falls downstream. This is the classic “bottleneck” scenario that NEET loves to test.
Biology usually has redundancy. Does the system have an alternative route — perhaps using light saturation (above a threshold, more light doesn’t help)? If yes, the effect is partial. If no, the whole pathway halts.
At the organism level, blocking Blackman’s law in factors affecting photosynthesis typically produces a visible phenotype — slowed growth, reduced response, or metabolic imbalance. This is exactly the kind of prediction NEET asks you to make.
Final prediction: Upstream substrate accumulates, downstream product drops, and the organism shows a measurable defect unless a backup pathway (e.g., involving light saturation) can compensate.
Why This Works
Tricky NEET and JEE-Advanced-style biology problems almost always reduce to pathway reasoning: break a step, predict the pileup, predict the deficit. If you have the pathway diagram in your head for factors affecting photosynthesis, these questions are free marks.
Alternative Method
Instead of reasoning forward, reason backward from the observed symptom. If you’re told “organism shows X”, ask “which step in factors affecting photosynthesis would fail to produce X?” This reverse approach is faster for multiple-choice questions.
NEET has asked pathway-inhibitor questions on factors affecting photosynthesis in at least two recent years. Expect one every cycle — it’s a scoring topic if you know the pathway, brutal if you don’t.
Common Mistake
Assuming a blocked component means the whole system dies. Most biological pathways have redundancy or alternative routes. Always mention the backup before concluding.
For any pathway chapter, memorise: (1) the sequence, (2) one inhibitor per step, (3) the resulting phenotype. Three bullet points per step covers every trick question.