Yes, oxygen is the fuel for respiration... oxygen + glucose = carbod dioxide + water + Energy However, the carbon dioxide and oxygen for a plant or tree would be the other way round because plants breath in co2 and give out oxygen.
No, the first reaction is glycolysis, a process that both aerobic organisms and anaerobic organisms go through (meaning oxygen isn't needed). Oxygen comes into the photosynthetic process at the end of the Electron Transport Chain (ETC) as the final electron acceptor in aerobes.
Only some of the reactions require oxygen.
Yes, oxygen is required to conduct cellular respriation.
glucose + oxygen --------------> carbon dioxide + water
For electron transport chain. Oxygen is the last electron acceptor
It is needed for final step.That is electron transport chain.
buttsack
yes it is. oxygen and glucose are both required.
Glycolisis is the step of respiration occurs in cytoplasm.It do not need O2.
The first stage in cellular respiration is known as Glycolysis.
Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm during the first stage of respiration.
the oldest stage of cellular respiration from an evolutinary perspective?
No. Nitrogen is required to make proteins (which DO the photosynthesis & the respiration), but is not classed as part of the cycles.
yes it is. oxygen and glucose are both required.
Glycolisis is the step of respiration occurs in cytoplasm.It do not need O2.
The first stage in cellular respiration is known as Glycolysis.
your skin is the most important stage of cellular respiration
Respiration would take fuels of hydrocarbons, sugars, carbohydrates, natural fats, etc. Oxygen, of course, is also required for respiration. Carbon Dioxide is a product of respiration, and not a fuel. Nitrogen Gas (N2) is relatively inert in the body, and not a fuel of respiration. Argon and the inert gases are not fuels.
Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm during the first stage of respiration.
the oldest stage of cellular respiration from an evolutinary perspective?
no it does not
No, this is because no living thing breaths or exhales nitrogen.
The second stage of cellular respiration, after glycolysis, occurs in the mitochondria. All of the stages of cellular respiration (after glycolysis in the cytoplasm) occur in the mitochondria.
it not fermentation