Every cell. CO2 is a product of respiration, and all cells in a plant respire.
From plant life. Animals including humans exhale carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is a heavy gas and fall to the ground. Whereupon it is absorbed by plant life. Under the process of photosynthesis, carbon dioxide in the plant is broken down into carbon and oxygen. The carbon is retained in the plant as biomass, and the oxygen is released back into the atmosphere, for animals to breathe. It is all part of the oxygen/carbon cycle.
The Carbon in Glucose made by plants comes from the Carbon in the Carbon Dioxide (CO2) gas in the air.
sunlight, water and carbon dioxide go in, water vapor, sugars and oxygen come out
Carbon Dioxide is the air we breathe out. :)
They get it from the carbon dioxide dissolved in the water. This exists in four forms - carbon dioxide, carbonic acid, carbonate ion,and bicarbonate ion. Plants all use carbon dioxide, and some underwater plants can also use bicarbonate ions.
Yes. Burning carbon or a carbon compound will produce carbon dioxide.
No. Where would the carbon in the carbon dioxide come from?
No ,
The carbon atoms used to produce sugars during photosynthesis primarily come from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Plants take in carbon dioxide through small openings in their leaves called stomata, and then use the energy from sunlight to convert the carbon dioxide into sugars through a series of biochemical reactions.
From carbohydrates
CO2 comes as a product of cell metabolism and its presence in the blood acts as the stimulus to breath.
Energy in the form of ATP and carbon dioxide are the two main products that come out of mitochondria. ATP is the energy currency of the cell, while carbon dioxide is a byproduct of cellular respiration.