Isaac0427 said:
No, there is a net consumption of water. There is, however, production of water, as evident by the H2O on the right side of the equation. As I have said, experiments show that different water molecules are produced from the ones consumed. In the light independent reactions, however, the equation (see the link in post 12) shows a net production of water. So water is produced. My question is how.
(You and others have noted that photosynthesis results in a net consumption of water. Also, it's been noted that the light reactions consume water to make ATP, NADPH, and oxygen. So all that's left are the dark reactions. Starting from there...) You could go through each of the steps in the Calvin cycle individually to see what happens. In what follows, I'm only tangentially concerned with mechanistic details (and not concerned at all about ion charges, or pH, or anything like that); I'm focused mainly on the stoichiometry--i.e., where the water comes from.
In the first step, RuBisCO catalyzes the addition of a CO
2 to RuBP, and a water molecule is consumed to hydrolyze the 6-carbon intermediate to two 3-carbon products (3-phosphoglycerate). So that's one water molecule consumed. The empirical formula looks like:
$$C_5H_{12}O_{11}P_2 +CO_2+H_2O \longrightarrow 2 C_3H_7O_7P$$
In the next step, a phosphate condensation reaction occurs:
$$C_3H_7O_7P + HPO_3 \longrightarrow C_3H_8O_{10}P_2$$
but this reaction can really (very very crudely) be thought of as:
$$C_3H_7O_7P + H_3PO_4 \longrightarrow C_3H_8O_{10}P_2+H_2O$$
(Side note: a "condensation" reaction almost always means water is generated as a product. Similarly, a dehydration/hydrolysis reaction means that water is consumed as a reagent.)
Since two of these reactions happen per 1 RuBP molecule, you get a net production of one molecule of water. Further, since the Calvin cycle involves 3 reactions of CO
2 with RuBP, you get a net production of 3 molecules of water. If you continue in this fashion, with the rest of the Calvin cycle, you see that water is consumed/produced at multiple points along the way, generally when phosphate groups are being added or removed.