It is obvious that it doesn't....
No, aerobic respiration takes place in the mitochondria. The mitochondria uses oxygen to produce energy for the cell.
Oxygen and mitochondria.
anerobic respiration and glycolisis of aerobic respiration take place in cytoplasm.kreb cycle and electron transport chain of aerobic respiration take place in mitochondria.
That is the aerobic respiration. It provides energy for cell
Cytoplasm and mitochondria
Respiration take place in mitochondria.It gives energy to cell.
Aerobic respiration has three steps.Glycolisis take place in cytoplasm.Kreb cycle and Electron transport chain take place in Mitochondria.
Aerobic respiration takes place in the mitochondria of the cell. This process involves the breakdown of glucose molecules to produce energy in the form of ATP. Oxygen is required for this process to occur efficiently.
False. Aerobic reactions take place in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells, not in the cytosol. The mitochondria are the organelles responsible for aerobic respiration, which generates energy in the form of ATP.
Aerobic respiration ends in mitochondria. Anaerobic in the cytoplasm
Aerobic respiration is an almost universal process - carried out by most animals and plants.It consists of several stages, the first of which is shared with anaerobic respiration and takes place in the cytoplasm of cells. The purely aerobic reactions take place inside mitochondria, small specialized organelles within the cytoplasm of all body cells. More active cells have more mitochondria.
Aerobic respiration has three main stages: glycolysis, Kreb's cycle and the electron transport chain (oxidative phosphorylation). Glycolysis takes place in the cytoplasm. The other two stages take place in the mitochondria.