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Cellular respiration
Stomata and the thickness of the leaf
The products of cellular respiration are water and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is taken away from the cell by the bloodstream and carried to the lungs, where it is expelled when you exhale. The water simply becomes part of the water in your body. The human body is mostly water anyway.
carbon dioxide
The lysosome is the organelle most likely to be missing from the cells of a leaf. The leaf cells have membranes, a wall, and chloroplast.
Oxygen is given off during photosynthesis.It is during the aerobic cellular respiration of the leaf cells that carbon dioxide is given off.
Cellular respiration
Stomata and the thickness of the leaf
Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast. During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide, water, and light energy is turned into glucose and oxygen. Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria. During cellular respiration, glucose and oxygen and turned into carbon dioxide, water, and energy. As you can see, the are both really a big cycle.
Stamata are located on the underside of the leaf and are used for taking in Co2.
Chloroplast
Yes. All plant cells have a cellular wall, while animal and bacterial cells have cell membranes.
No Guard cells are cells that close when there is dry weather, preventing the leaf from becoming dehydrated
inter cellular space
spongy and pallisade parenchyma
The leaf surface has many tiny apertures called stomata. During respiration oxygen from the atmosphere diffuses into the stomata and then into the cells of the leaf. When carbon dioxide concentration in the cells increases, the stomata opens and releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
The Food Making Cell In A Leaf, Is Obviously A Cell Inside A Leaf That Get Their Supply Of Carbon Dioxide Through Tiny Pores (stomata) Which Are Mainly On The Underside Of A Leaf.(:I think that it is the mesophyll cells which contains palisade cells and inter-cellular space