The two products of respiration are carbon dioxide and water. The latter is commonly seen as byproduct, though it comes in (about) equal amounts.
(In anaerobic respiration even carbon dioxide might not be a product at all: )
Example: microbial anaerobic 'methanogenesis'
CH3COOH → CH4 + CO2 and CO2 + 4H2 → CH4 + 2H2O
Glucose is a product of photosynthesis and a reactant in cellular respiration.
No, ATP is a product. ADP assists in the creation of ATP in cellular respiration.
ATP is used for cellular respiration. It is not a product of cellular respiration.
Sugar produced from respiration.
The products of aerobic respiration are water and carbon dioxide. The products of anaerobic respiration are carbon dioxide and either lactic acid or alcohol. The waste product of anaerobic respiration is lactic acid (in animals). In plants, ethanol is the waste product.
No, it is a product.
carbon & water
The product of respiration glucose when it convert into form of energy. BY Tanishq
The ending product of anaerobic respiration in muscle cells is lactic acid.
The two products of respiration are carbon dioxide and water vapor. So the only product that is not a gas is water.
NO! It is not, it is an end product of cellular respiration.
The purpose of respiration - aerobic or anaerobic - is the production of ATP.