No, carbon dioxide is fixed to oxaloacetate to begin the cycle that makes one product glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate out of six produced, then the other five G3P are recycled back into oxaloacetate and the cycle begins again.
During the Calvin cycle, carbon dioxide (CO2) is fixed to produce sugars.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is the molecule from the air that is broken down during the Calvin cycle in photosynthesis to produce glucose.
The source of carbon for the Calvin cycle is carbon dioxide.
The reactant in the Calvin cycle is carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. This carbon dioxide is fixed and converted into organic molecules, such as glucose, through a series of enzymatic reactions in the Calvin cycle.
Carbon dioxide is the reactant used in the Calvin cycle. It is combined with ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) by the enzyme Rubisco to initiate the process of carbon fixation and ultimately produce glucose.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) enters the Calvin cycle from the atmosphere. This CO2 is used by plants during photosynthesis to produce glucose.
It is the dark reaction. We call it calvin cycle too.
co2 isn't released in the Calvin cycle it takes in 3 co2 to produce one G3P molecule and does that twice to produce C6H12O6
No, it is not.
Carbon dioxide
carbon dioxide from the air is used to produce glucose and other compounds.