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The reaction site of the first and second steps of aerobic respiration is called the matrix. Aerobic respiration occurs inside a Golgi body.
It is the first step. It is common to aerobic and anaerobic respiration
First step of both aerobic and non aerobic respiration is Glycolisis.It take place in cytoplasm
aerobic respiration basically its first step is called glycolysis and is further divded in two forms either aerobic which occur in presence of o2 and anaerobic in absences of oxygen Exactly so to answer the question the process the REQUIRES O2 is aerobic respiration like i said.
Carbon dioxide is released in aerobic respiration during the second stage of reactions. Enzymes break down the pyruvate created during glycolysis (the first stage) into C02. The second stage is also called the Krebs Cycle
the two main types of cellular respiration are aerobic cellular respiration and anaerobic cellular respiration.
Rawr!
During glycolosis.
Cell respiration is the way a cell "breathes" and produces energy. There are two kinds of cell respiration. First one is called "aerobic", meaning the cell uses oxygen, the other one called "anaerobic" means the cell doesnÇ_t need oxygen to produce energy.
Anaerobic respiration likely evolved before aerobic respiration. Anaerobic pathways are considered more ancient and can be traced back to early prokaryotic organisms. Aerobic respiration evolved later as a more efficient process that became advantageous with the presence of oxygen in Earth's atmosphere.
Glycolysis, the first stage of aerobic respiration, occurs in a cell's cytoplasm. The second stage (acetyl-CoA formation and the Krebs cycle) and the third stage (electron transfer phosphorylation) occur inside a cell's mitochondria. They occur at the inner mitochondrial membrane, which is highly folded. Therefore, most of the reactions of aerobic cellular respiration occur inside the mitochondria of a cell.
The first part of respiration is called inhalation, the second part is exhalation. Inspiration and expiration are different things