we would die along with plants and animals
Blah
Acapnia is the medical term meaning lack of carbon dioxide
Venous blood is loaded with carbon dioxide and low in oxygen Arterial blood is rich in oxygen with little carbon dioxide
Watermelons, like all living organisms, require carbon dioxide for photosynthesis, which is essential for their growth and development. Watermelons absorb carbon dioxide from the air through tiny pores on their leaves called stomata, where it is utilized in the process of photosynthesis to produce sugars for the plant's energy needs.
Carbon dioxide is a crucial substrate for photosynthesis as it is used by plants to produce glucose and oxygen. Without sufficient carbon dioxide, the process of photosynthesis cannot proceed effectively, resulting in a decrease in plant growth and productivity.
yes plant die in space because lack of carbon dioxide (co2) .
Plants "breathe" carbon dioxide. They use it in photosynthesis. If carbon dioxide was completely wiped out, plants would die. During photosynthesis, plants turn carbon dioxide into oxygen, which we humans breathe. Once the plants die, humans would also die from lack of oxygen. Carbon dioxide is not something we should try to get rid of completely. The bulk of the carbon dioxide is created by nature. Man produces 3 to 6% of the CO2, the rest is natural.
Air contains oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and other compounds. We take carbon dioxide into our lungs all the time, but our lungs keep the oxygen. However, if you were in a room with ONLY carbon dioxide, you would die--not from carbon dioxide per se, but from lack of oxygen.
No, the reaction between hydrochloric acid (HCl) and zinc does not produce carbon dioxide. It produces zinc chloride salt and hydrogen gas. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 2HCl + Zn -> ZnCl2 + H2.
It goes up - surprisingly, while this practice induces unconsciousness, it is not due to lack of Oxygen - it is the overabundance of unremoved unwanted CO2 that makes One pass out.
12 carbon monoxides due to lack of enough oxygen when it was being formed
include shock, congestive heart failure, lack of oxygen or too much carbon dioxide in the blood, irregular heartbeat, stroke, infection, kidney damage, lung blood clot, low blood pressure, hemorrhage, cardiac arrest, and death.