Yes, they both create ATP. The difference is, cellular respiration creates 36 ATP molecules and fermentation only creates 2 ATP molecules.
Cellular respiration and fermentation both produce ATP - which is a form of energy that cells can use.
The reason that they alike is because they are both trying to produce ATP for your body, but if Cellular Respiration fails, then they resort to Fermentation to get the job done! Hope that that was helpful! Julian
Respiration requires oxygen to obtain energy from glucose. Fermentation does not need oxygen to obtain energy from glucose. You use respiration. Yeasts use fermentation.
Cellular respiration is more efficient than fermentation. Cellular respiration produces approximately 36-38 ATP molecules, while fermentation produces only 2 ATP, which is a significant loss in usable energy.
Yes, it is required for cellular respiration. It is due to the affinity of electrons towards oxygen that enables mitochondria to harvest energy for the cell.
Cells can release energy in two basic processes: Cellular respiration and fermentation. Cellular respiration requires oxygen but fermentation does not. Cellular respiration releases MUCH more usable energy then fermentation does.
Fermentation!!!!!
Mitochondrial energy is harvested from fermentation and cellular respiration. This breaks down the nutrients and turns them into glucose molecules and then to energy.
Respiration
Cellular respiration and fermentation both produce ATP - which is a form of energy that cells can use.
Both fermentation and cellular respiration release energy from glucose and other food molecules, making them similar in their processes.
it is cellular respiration
Cellular respiration is more efficient than fermentation. Cellular respiration produces approximately 36-38 ATP molecules, while fermentation produces only 2 ATP, which is a significant loss in usable energy.
The reason that they alike is because they are both trying to produce ATP for your body, but if Cellular Respiration fails, then they resort to Fermentation to get the job done! Hope that that was helpful! Julian
Both fermentation and cellular respiration release energy from glucose and other food molecules, making them similar in their processes.
No.
Cellular respiration is the process by which cells produce ATP for energy. Also, cellular respiration is much more efficient than fermentation, the process by which single celled organisms. (Cellular respiration produces 18 times more ATP than fermentation) Essentially, without cellular respiration is what keeps the cells in your body functioning.