The ability of 21 C-3 and C-4 monocot and dicot species to rapidly export newly fixed C in the light at both ambient and enriched CO2 levels was compared. Photosynthesis and concurrent export rates were estimated during isotopic equilibrium of the transport sugars using a steady-state (CO2)-C-14-labeling procedure. At ambient CO2 photosynthesis and export rates for C-3 species were 5 to 15 and 1 to 10 mu mol C m(-2) s(-1), respectively, and 20 to 30 and 15 to 22 mu mol C m(-2) s(-1), respectively, for C-4 species. A linear regression plot of export on photosynthesis rate of all species had a correlation coefficient of 0.87. When concurrent export was expressed as a percentage of photosynthesis, several C-3 dicots that produced transport sugars other than Suc had high efflux rates relative to photosynthesis, comparable to those of C-4 species. At high CO2 photosynthetic and export rates were only slightly altered in C, species, and photosynthesis increased but export rates did not in all C(3)species. The C-3 species that had high efflux rates relative to photosynthesis at ambient CO2 exported at rates comparable to those of C-4 species on both an absolute basis and as a percentage of photosynthesis. At ambient CO2 there were strong linear relationships between photosynthesis, sugar synthesis, and concurrent export. However, at high CO2 the relationships between photosynthesis and export rate and between sugar synthesis and export rate were not as strong because sugars and starch were accumulated.