B glucose (when animals eating the plant) and oxygen (from being near the plants).
Plants provide:
plants take in carbon dioxide and produce glucose animals consume plants animals break down glucose and release carbon dioxide
There are two very basic reactions that can be said to support life on this earth. One is photosynthesis, which happens in plants. In photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide and water and convert it to glucose and oxygen. Overall, photosynthesis requires energy, gathered from sunlight. This energy essentially winds up stored in the glucose. Usually, the glucose will wind up being stored in more complex sugars and starches. The other reaction is respiration, which releases the energy from glucose. This reaction requires oxygen, and releases carbon dioxide and water. Plants and animals use this reaction to provide the energy that they need. So, anything that stores glucose or its more complex forms does store carbon. However, animals take in glucose and break it down, thus releasing carbon dioxide, while plants tend to absorb much more carbon dioxide than they release. Thus, both plants and animals do store carbon, but only plants will actually absorb carbon dioxide and store that carbon.
carbon dioxide
Animals emit carbon dioxide. Plants consume carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide
plants take in carbon dioxide and produce glucose animals consume plants animals break down glucose and release carbon dioxide
There are two very basic reactions that can be said to support life on this earth. One is photosynthesis, which happens in plants. In photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide and water and convert it to glucose and oxygen. Overall, photosynthesis requires energy, gathered from sunlight. This energy essentially winds up stored in the glucose. Usually, the glucose will wind up being stored in more complex sugars and starches. The other reaction is respiration, which releases the energy from glucose. This reaction requires oxygen, and releases carbon dioxide and water. Plants and animals use this reaction to provide the energy that they need. So, anything that stores glucose or its more complex forms does store carbon. However, animals take in glucose and break it down, thus releasing carbon dioxide, while plants tend to absorb much more carbon dioxide than they release. Thus, both plants and animals do store carbon, but only plants will actually absorb carbon dioxide and store that carbon.
No, plants in an aquarium provide oxygen to the animals.
The process is called respiration, plants respire too but only at night. The word equation for this is: Glucose + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy
Uh plants provide Oxygen first of all. And animals are mammals with lungs which exchange oxygen for carbon dioxide just like humans.
one of them is that animals provide CO2, carbon dioxide when they breathe in
Carbon dioxide and water
Photosynthesis takes in carbon dioxide and H2O (water) and spits out oxygen and glucose (sugar). Cellular respiration takes that oxygen and glucose and spits out carbon dioxide and H2O. plants inhale what animals exhale, and animals inhale what plants exhale.
No, water and glucose are solutions. Carbon dioxide is an element though.
sunlight water=carbon dioxide---glucose=oxegen chlorophyll or you can have... carbon dioxide = water= glucose = oxegen
Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy/ATP
carbon dioxide