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.
It forms high-energy ATP
Aerobic cellular respiration forms the most ATP. It involves a series of metabolic reactions that occur in the presence of oxygen to fully break down glucose, producing a total of 36-38 ATP molecules per glucose molecule.
ATP is used for cellular respiration. It is not a product of 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
Anaerobic respiration does not require oxygen, while cellular respiration does. Anaerobic respiration produces less energy compared to cellular respiration.
Some important questions to ask about cellular respiration include: How does cellular respiration produce energy for cells? What are the different stages of cellular respiration and how do they work? What role do mitochondria play in cellular respiration? How is cellular respiration related to the process of photosynthesis? What factors can affect the efficiency of cellular respiration in cells?
Oxygen is the difference! Cellular respiration requires oxygen, while cellular fermentation does not.
The products of cellular respiration (carbon dioxide and water) are the starting products of photosynthesis. In photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are used to produce glucose and oxygen, which are then used in cellular respiration to produce energy. This interdependence forms a continuous cycle between the two processes.
Cellular respiration is the process by which food molecules, such as glucose, are broken down, and which forms ATP, the energy currency of the cell. Without ATP a cell would die.
Oxygen is necessary for aerobic respiration only . It is not required in anaerobic respiration . Oxygen is final electron acceptor and it forms water at end of E.T.C.