There are anaerobic and aerobic types of cellular respiration.
Anaerobic (including glycolysis) respiration does not involve oxygen.
Aerobic (including the Kreb's, or citric acid, cycle and oxidative phosphorylation) respiration requires oxygen, and generates much more energy than anaerobic respiration.
aerobic cellular respiration
Some forms of cellular respiration may be referred to as aerobic respiration because OXYGEN is used in the process. Those forms wherein oxygen is NOT used are referred to anaerobic respiration.
Citric acid forms during the electron transport chain and citric acid cycle in cellular respiration. Citric acid is a six-carbon acid.
It forms high-energy ATP
According to Biologists, cellular respiration forms an energy source when respiration occurs in the presence of oxygen. Also, this creates aerobic and metabolic respiration.
Yes - all living things undergo cellular respiration (although there are different forms of this).Plants undergo both photosynthesis and cellular respiration.
ATP is used for cellular respiration. It is not a product of cellular respiration.
Cellular Respiration
Towards the beginning of cellular respiration oxygen forms many bonds that create sugars, so two of the elements would be carbon and hydrogen. However oxygen molecules also bonds with H+ ions around the end of cellular respiration to form water.
Photosynthesis' products are the same as the reactants of cellular respiration. In other words photosynthesis makes what cellular respiration uses.
carbon dioxide and the Krebs cycle
No; that is known as "respiration," not "cellular respiration."