Oxygen is the waste product of the process photosynthesis. The tree uses carbon dioxide, water and sunlight (this is trapped by the green pigment in leaves called chlorophyll), to create glucose. Oxygen is released as a waste product.
respiration
A tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the air, and, with the input of energy from sunlight, oxidizes many of the oxygen atoms of the absorbed carbon dioxide to elemental oxygen, which is released into the atmosphere. The carbon and some of the oxygen atoms from the absorbed carbon dioxide are incorporated into the structure of the tree as the tree grows.
A tree takes in carbon dioxide, and returns oxygen to the atmosphere.
More carbon dioxide is being produced primarily due to human activities such as burning fossil fuels, deforestation, and industrial processes. These activities release large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to the greenhouse effect and global warming.
Yes. Trees take in carbon dioxide and water. Using sunlight they turn this into carbon, oxygen and sugar. They store the carbon and release the oxygen. This is called photosynthesis.
In a sense yes, but not necessarily, see a tree produces oxygen and takes in carbon dioxide. A deer takes in oxygen and produces carbon dioxide. So a tree, for instance a redwood, can provide oxygen that the deer needs in order to survive, and the deer produces carbon dioxide that a tree needs to survive.
If we cut down all the tree's it could. Tree's recycle carbon dioxide and turn it into oxygen.
It converts carbon dioxide into oxygen. Carbon dioxide traps heat so when the trees convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, it not only reduce the amount of heat by a bit but also give us oxygen to breathe in.
A Tree can produce oxygen as well has carbon-dioxide.
maybe oxygen because it releases carbon dioxide
lucky for humans
About half the body weight of a tree is carbon. The tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, stores the carbon, and releases the oxygen. As the tree grows, it stores more and more carbon.
About half the body weight of a tree is carbon. The tree absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, stores the carbon, and releases the oxygen. As the tree grows, it stores more and more carbon.