Aerobic respiration ends in mitochondria. Anaerobic in the cytoplasm
it ends in the cell
ends up going to the sun
The electron transport chain.
Yes - glucose is broken down in the first step of cellular respiration. This stage is known as glycolysis and occurs in the cytoplasm. Cellular respiration begins with glucose and ends creating ATP.
ATP is used for cellular respiration. It is not a product of cellular respiration.
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.
Because cellular respiration occurs in the presence of oxygen.
The first step of the process is the digestion.
Cellular respiration need oxygen. This oxygen is supplied by external respiration
Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria.