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Plants perform photosynthesis, where they fix carbon dioxide into sugars and release oxygen from water, and then consume these sugars using cellular respiration, releasing carbon dioxide from the sugars and taking in oxygen to create water
No, the process is to take in carbon dioxide with water and sunlight to make sugars; the by-product is oxygen.
Photosynthesis produces oxygen and glucose.
The chloroplasts are found in oxygen-releasing organisms (mostly plants), and transform carbon dioxide, which animals exhale, and sunlight into their own sugars for food and oxygen as a byproduct. The mitochondion is an organelle that transforms oxygen into carbon dioxide. The two work hand-in-hand, for animals need the plants' oxygen and plants need the animals' carbon dioxide, a cycle.
the products of photo-synthesis are anything that the plant produces for example: * different sugars * oxygen
cell respiration consumes oxygen and sugars and produces CO2, photosynthesis consumes CO2 and produces oxygen and sugars
the mitochondria converts foods such as sugars into usable energy for the cell
Plants perform photosynthesis, where they fix carbon dioxide into sugars and release oxygen from water, and then consume these sugars using cellular respiration, releasing carbon dioxide from the sugars and taking in oxygen to create water
No, the process is to take in carbon dioxide with water and sunlight to make sugars; the by-product is oxygen.
Photosynthesis produces oxygen and glucose.
The chloroplasts are found in oxygen-releasing organisms (mostly plants), and transform carbon dioxide, which animals exhale, and sunlight into their own sugars for food and oxygen as a byproduct. The mitochondion is an organelle that transforms oxygen into carbon dioxide. The two work hand-in-hand, for animals need the plants' oxygen and plants need the animals' carbon dioxide, a cycle.
Mitochondria
nothing
the products of photo-synthesis are anything that the plant produces for example: * different sugars * oxygen
it is an enzyme called lipase.
No. Sugars are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but not nitrogen.
The vacuole.