Not quite. During photosynthesis, polysaccharides are made to store excess sugar. Polysaccharides are long chains of monosacchrides linked together.
First product of photosynthesis is glucose. And yes,glucose is a monosaccharide
Oxygen is produced in the chloroplasts of plant cells during the process of photosynthesis.
Monosaccharides are produced through the reduction of di-/polysaccharides in the case of animals. Plants on the other hand, produce monosaccharides (glucose) through photosynthesis. They take the monomers and bond them together into starch for storage. The starch is the energy that animals and humans acquire during consumption. We then follow through with the digestion process which breaks the glycosidic linkages between monomers in order to utilize the glucose.
Photosynthesis
The gaseous by-product oxygen is produced during the process of photosynthesis in plants. During photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen. Oxygen is released as a waste product into the atmosphere.
Oxygen is produced during the light reactions of photosynthesis when water molecules are split by the photosystem II complex. This process releases oxygen as a byproduct.
carbon dioxide
CO2 and water is needed. Oxygen and glucose are produced
CO2 and water is needed. Oxygen and glucose are produced
Oxygen is produced during photosynthesis , so when it is reversed , Carbon Dioxide is produces
glucose is made during photosynthesis
Hydrolysis of polysaccharides is the reaction that produces monosaccharides.
Glucose is the sugar produced during photosynthesis. It is a simple carbohydrate that serves as the primary source of energy for the plant and is also used as a building block for more complex carbohydrates like starch.
yes
No chlorophyll is the main green photosynthetic pigment in plants that produces glucose during photosynthesis
Diatomic Oxygen - O2.
Chlorophyll
TO:All ViewersGlucose and Oxygen Gas are produced during PhotosynthesisTruly yours,Ma. Lorbie Candelaria(Pls add me to your facebook)