CO2 is fixed or incorporated into organic molecules.
Photosynthesis splits water to liberate O2 and fixes CO2 into sugar.
Plants use CO2 during photosynthesis to convert it into oxygen and glucose, which is essential for their growth and survival. CO2 also plays a role in maintaining the Earth's temperature by trapping heat in the atmosphere, contributing to the greenhouse effect.
Glucose It is the primary substrate.Glucose is oxizdied into CO2
Photosynthesis is responsible for lowering the levels of atmospheric CO2 since it is a requirement to make glucose. Cellular respiration produces CO2 as a by-product, so it is responsible for some atmospheric CO2.
CO2
Photosynthesis splits water to liberate O2 and fixes CO2 into sugar.
Photosynthesis splits water to liberate O2 and fixes CO2 into sugar.
CO2 and H2O are two essential basic compounds for photosynthesis which occur in presence of sunlight
Plants use CO2 during photosynthesis to convert it into oxygen and glucose, which is essential for their growth and survival. CO2 also plays a role in maintaining the Earth's temperature by trapping heat in the atmosphere, contributing to the greenhouse effect.
The reduction of CO2 occurs in photosynthesis, where plants convert CO2 into carbohydrates using sunlight. In respiration, organisms use carbohydrates as a fuel source and release CO2 back into the atmosphere.
The products of photosynthesis are glucose (C6H12O6) and oxygen (O2). Carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) are the reactants required for the process of photosynthesis to occur, not byproducts.
No it is respirationYes,it is photosynthesis. CO2 is oxidized into glucose using water and light energy
Glucose It is the primary substrate.Glucose is oxizdied into CO2
The making of glucose from CO2 using sunlight is called photosynthesis. The breaking down of glucose and release of CO2 is respiration.
It is called photosynthesis. It is the CO2 reduction into glucose
There are several carbon dioxide removal systems at work on the Earth - photosynthesis, dissolving into the basic (high pH) ocean waters, formation into coral and sea animal shells, chemical deposition as a carbonate.
No. Photosynthesis produces O2 as a waste product, not CO2. CO2 is needed to perform photosynthesis.