not all organisms completely oxidise the glucose. it depends on whether they undergo aerobic respiration or anaerobic respiraion. in aerobic respiration glucose is completey oxidised to give out CO2 as a waste product and H2O and energy. this can be represented as Glucose------>pyruvate------> CO2 + H2O + 36 ATP Energy
They are the same: starch is the form in which glucose is stored. So nothing happens.
The organism dies and is digested from the organism it was eaten by.
Nothing happens to the glucose. It should have been stored in the kidney, but it didn't, therefore, you have an excess amount glucose in your blood. Hence, the insulin shots.
the organism will not survive and will die as a result if it is not quickly restored
Cell gain energy.
Ethanoic acid is formed
Oxidised from Fe2+ to Fe2+
Aldehyde are oxidised to the corresponding carbonic acid by F.'s or T.'s agents. Ketone can not be oxidised.
Nothing at all. The sodium is fully oxidised in sodium chloride and chlorine gas has no effect. +++ "... fully oxidised..." Really? There is no oxygen in the compound, which is simply NaCl.
It produces Iodine and other Potassium salt (depending on the oxidizer)
The atomic mass increases depending on how many oxygen atoms reacted with it.
what will happen to the organism
what happens to glucose is its a some type of engry
They are the same: starch is the form in which glucose is stored. So nothing happens.
no respiration is a process that happens in an organism
concentration of glucose in the urine decreases.
Autotrophs store energy in long chains of glucose molecules. These chains can be either starch or cellulose, depending on how the glucose are connected. When a heterotroph consumes the autotroph, it breaks down the cellulose or starch into its basic glucose components. The consumer either completely breaks down the glucose for energy, or it stores the molecules as fat or glycogen.