Three-year-old plants of Parthenium argentatum Gray cv. 11591 grown under natural photoperiod were exposed for 60 d to low night temperature (LNT) of 15 °C (daily from 18:00 to 06:00). Effects of the treatment on net photosynthetic rates (PN), rubber accumulation, and associated biochemical traits were examined. LNT initially reduced PN with a parallel decline in the activities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, fructose bisphosphatase, and sucrose phosphate synthase for 20-30 d. Later, LNT enhanced PN and the activities of photosynthetic enzymes. Associated with high PN in LNT-treated guayule plants was a two-fold increase in rubber content and rubber transferase activity per unit of protein. The initial decrease in PN in LNT-treated guayule was associated with low content of chlorophyll (a+b), large starch accumulation, and higher ratio of glucose-6-phosphate/fructose-6-phosphate. Photosystem 2 activity in isolated chloroplasts was initially decreased, but increased after 30 d. There was a significant increase in the leaf soluble protein content in LNT-treated plants. Hence the photosynthetic performance of plants grown at 15 °C night temperature for 50 d was superior to those grown under natural photoperiod in all parameters studied. The high photosynthetic capacity may contribute to superior rubber yields under LNT. and D. Sundar, A. Ramachandra Reddy.