Yes. An aerobic organism is an organism that can grow and survive in the presence of oxygen. Mammals need oxygen to have cellular respiration, so they are obligate aerobes.
Mammals use aerobic respiration.
Aerobic organisms use oxygen.
Aerobic organisms require oxygen.
The electron transport generates the most ATP in the aerobic respiration. Higher organisms, such as reptiles, mammals, and birds, require a tremendous amount of ATP to function; therefore, the cells of higher organisms most frequently use aerobic respiration.
Yes mammals are organisms .
Aerobic organisms inhale oxygen and exhale CO2 because they use a process called cellular respiration. This is why organisms breathe.
mammals
No, the aerobic organism cannot be oxidase negative. This is because the aerobic organisms use oxygen as the electron acceptor. The aerobic organism are therefore oxidase positive.
Animals are aerobic eukaryotic organisms. Aerobic organisms are those which get their energy by chemically breaking down molecules using oxygen. Eukaryotic organisms are those with cells that have internal organelles, particularly a nucleus. All aerobic eukaryotes produce energy within the mitochondria of their cells.
mammals
mammals
It depends on what you mean by non-mammals. If you are counting all matter as a non-mammal, then most non-mammals are not organisms. If you are counting a non-mammal as any life form or any animal that is not a mammal, then all non-mammals are organisms.