Anaerobic bacteria. I do not think mushroom or other fungi form oxygen.
Humans breathe in oxygen, which plants produce, and breathe out carbon dioxide, which plants take in.
No, not all living things produce carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is produced mainly through the process of cellular respiration in organisms that use oxygen to break down organic molecules for energy. Plants, for example, produce oxygen through photosynthesis rather than carbon dioxide.
Burning (combustion) of organic substance will produce waste Carbon Dioxide. Also metabolic processes in living things produces waste Carbon Dioxide.
During respiration, living organisms produce carbon dioxide, water, and energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP).
Living things produce carbon dioxide as a byproduct of cellular respiration. During this process, organisms use oxygen to break down glucose for energy, releasing carbon dioxide as a waste product.
Trees don't produce carbon dioxide; living things do, such as us humans. They breathe carbon dioxide. In other words, carbon dioxide is to them like oxygen is to us.
Carbon Dioxide. Animals exhale carbon dioxide as a product of respiration. Plants principally utilise carbon dioxide and produce oxygen through photosynthesis. Plants may also respire in the absence of adequate sunlight, which is why keeping plants in the bedroom is not always a good idea.
No :P It uses electricity, and so doesn't use carbon compounds.
because they can When living things respire (breathe) - they use O2 and CO2 is one of the products of the reaction which produces energy (respiration). CO2 is toxic in moderate concentrations, and so it is exhaled.
Yes. Carbon is the most abundant element found in living things.
By breathing out.
Cows can produce both methane and carbon dioxide through their natural, bodily systems.