You did not specify properly but grown plants such as fruits, vegetables or insects (such as ants, Spiders, etc.) do not produce carbon dioxide but plants do take in carbon dioxide and exhale oxygen
when natural chemicals are poured onto gold, carbon dioxide is NOT formed, but, if there are man made chemicals poured into the gold there is a very low possibility that the gold would give out carbon dioxide. Gold is also the lowest element in the reactivity scale, along with silver and copper XxX
because it doesnt create CO2
Animals produce co2 and plants produce o2 and co2
Any ethanol producing fermentation makes CO2, so it's not a matter of can, it will produce CO2.
Absolutely wrong, rainforest doesnt produce oxygen at all, it has an OXYGENE TURNOVER, as O2 is released AND absorbed, overall it has almost no impact on the amount of O2 in the world, the only way more O2 is produced than it is consumed is by "Locking" carbon in plants, in other words, the only way for the rainforest to produce O2 is by growing, if it doesnt GROW, it doesnt produce any O2, and if it shrinks, it is releasing CO2.
Because dry seeds have a very low metabolic rate and do not produce much Co2. Germinating seeds produce more Co2.
yes they do (i think)
CO2?
CO2
carbon, oxygen
no, not at all. albeit amount of released oxygen can reach lower or even lowest but can't produce CO2.
Bananas.
Mulch itself does not produce CO2. Instead, when organic mulch decomposes, it releases small amounts of CO2 as a byproduct of the natural decomposition process. The amount of CO2 released will depend on factors such as the type of mulch, its thickness, and environmental conditions.