During The Calvin Cycle cycle, sugars are produced in the chloroplast.
During The Calvin Cycle cycle, sugars are produced in the chloroplast.
It is called calvin cycle. It is called dark reaction too
The chloroplast is the organelle that participates in the Calvin cycle. Within the chloroplast, the stroma is where the Calvin cycle takes place.
A chloroplast deprived of CO2 cannot generate glucose, as glucose is produced during the Calvin cycle through the conversion of CO2 to glucose. Without CO2, the chloroplast cannot fix carbon and proceed with the Calvin cycle to produce glucose.
The Calvin cycle occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast, which is the fluid-filled region surrounding the thylakoid membranes where the light-dependent reactions take place. This cycle involves a series of biochemical reactions that result in the synthesis of sugar molecules from carbon dioxide, powered by ATP and NADPH produced during the light reactions.
The Krebs cycle takes place in the mitochondrial matrix of a cell, not in the chloroplast.
The Calvin cycle takes place in the stroma of chloroplasts.
It is the cytoplasm of chloroplast. It is called as stroma
The production of glucose takes place during the light independent reactions (Calvin cycle) in the stroma of the chloroplast.
They are not storing. but they make glucose as a carbohydrate.
They are found in the matrix. It is cytoplasm like part in the chloroplast
Calvin Cycle in the Chloroplast