A mechanistic model was developed, to simulate the main facets of photoinhibition in phytoplankton.
Photoinhibition is modelled as a time dependent decrease in the initial slope of a photosynthesis versus irradiance
curve, related to D1 (photosystem II reaction centre protein) damage and non-photochemical quenching. The
photoinhibition model was incorporated into an existing ammonium-nitrate nutrition interaction model capable
of simulating photoacclimation and aspects of nitrogen uptake and utilization. Hence the current model can
simulate the effects of irradiance on photosynthesis from sub-saturating to inhibitory photon flux densities, during
growth on different nitrogen sources and under nutrient stress. Model output conforms well to experimental data,
allowing the extent of photoinhibition to be predicted under a range of nutrient and light regimes. The ability of
the model to recreate the afternoon depression of photosynthesis and the enhancement of photosynthesis during
fluctuating light suggests that these two processes are related to photoinhibition. The model may be used to predict
changes in biomass and/or carbon fixation under a wide range of oceanographic situations, and it may also help
to explain the progression to dominance of certain algal species, and bloom formation under defined irradiance and
nutrient conditions.