Z
Zbigniew Kolber
Researcher at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Publications - 76
Citations - 11292
Zbigniew Kolber is an academic researcher from Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photosynthesis & Chlorophyll fluorescence. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 76 publications receiving 10743 citations. Previous affiliations of Zbigniew Kolber include Rutgers University & University of California, Santa Cruz.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Measuring photosynthetic parameters at a distance: laser induced fluorescence transient (LIFT) method for remote measurements of photosynthesis in terrestrial vegetation.
Zbigniew Kolber,D. Klimov,D. Klimov,Gennady Ananyev,Gennady Ananyev,Uwe Rascher,Uwe Rascher,Joseph A. Berry,Joseph A. Berry,C. Barry Osmond,C. Barry Osmond +10 more
TL;DR: The theoretical basis of the LIFT methodology is described, and its applications in remote measurements of photosynthetic properties in the canopy of cottonwood and oak trees, and in the rosette of Arabidopsis mutants are demonstrated.
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Effects of Iron Limitation on Photosystem II Composition and Light Utilization in Dunaliella tertiolecta.
TL;DR: It is concluded that the photochemical conversion of absorbed excitation energy in iron-limited cells is limited by the number of photochemical traps per unit antenna.
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Fluorescence assessment of the maximum quantum efficiency of photosynthesis in the western North Atlantic
TL;DR: In this article, the maximum quantum efficiency (oII) of phytoplankton photosystem II photochemistry was assessed using a pump and probe fluorometer on an offshore-onshore transect from the oligotrophic blue waters of the western Sargasso Sea to the eutrophic waters of lower Delaware Bay.
Light utilization and photoinhibition of photosynthesis in marine phytoplankton
TL;DR: The factors determining light utilization efficiency of phytoplankton in the oceans, and the physiological acclimations which have evolved to optimize light utilization Efficiency are reviewed.
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Natural versus anthropogenic factors affecting low-level cloud albedo over the North Atlantic
Paul G. Falkowski,Yongseung Kim,Zbigniew Kolber,Cara Wilson,Creighton D. Wirick,Robert D. Cess +5 more
TL;DR: A comparison of two independent satellite data sets suggests that, although anthropogenic sulfate emissions may enhance cloudAlbedo immediately adjacent to the east coast of the United States, over the central North Atlantic Ocean the variability in albedo can be largely accounted for by natural marine and atmospheric processes that probably have remained relatively constant since the beginning of the industrial revolution.