Yes.
Aerobic respiration produces carbon dioxide and water. Also, oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor
Yes, yeast is capable of producing carbon dioxide through aerobic respiration when oxygen is present. This process involves the breakdown of glucose to produce energy, carbon dioxide, and water.
Carbon dioxide is produced during the Krebs cycle, which is the second stage of aerobic respiration that takes place in the mitochondria of cells. As part of this cycle, carbon dioxide is released as a byproduct when acetyl CoA is broken down to generate energy in the form of ATP.
Reactants of aerobic respiration are glucose and oxygen. The products are carbon dioxide, water, and energy (in the form of ATP).
Sperm cells do not have mitochondria and cannot generate energy through aerobic respiration. Therefore, they do not require oxygen or produce carbon dioxide. Instead, sperm cells rely on glycolysis to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Yes, aerobic respiration uses oxygen as the final electron acceptor in the electron transport chain. It produces carbon dioxide as a byproduct of the process along with water and energy in the form of ATP.
In Cellular (Aerobic) Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon Dioxide + Water Carbon Dioxide and Water are produced.
Yes, yeast is capable of producing carbon dioxide through aerobic respiration when oxygen is present. This process involves the breakdown of glucose to produce energy, carbon dioxide, and water.
Carbon dioxide is released, and heat as a by-product
The main gas produced in aerobic respiration is carbon dioxide (CO2).
Aerobic respiration:C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2Oglucose + oxygen produce carbon dioxide and waterPhotosynthesis:6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2carbon dioxide and water produce glucose and oxygenThe reactants of aerobic respiration are the products of photosynthesis. Organisms that undergo aerobic respiration need the products of photosynthesis to survive (this includes the plants and other photosynthesizing organisms themselves). Plants and other photosynthesizing organisms need the products of aerobic respiration in order to survive.
The main waste product of aerobic respiration is carbon dioxide (CO2).
Yes, both water and carbon dioxide are products of aerobic cellular respiration.
They are energy (ATP), water and carbon dioxide.
They can be thought of as the 'reverse' of each other (though their repective biochemical pathways are in no ways similar) and are the two halves of the carbon cycle. Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen -> Carbon dioxide + Water Photosynthesis: Carbon dioxide + Water -> Glucose +Oxygen
32-34 ATP, CO2, H20 Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen --> Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy (ATP)
Carbon dioxide, water and energy are produced by aerobic respiration. The word equation for aerobic respiration is: Glucose + oxygen --> carbon dioxide + water + energy Energy and lactic acid are produced by anerobic respiration The word equation for anaerobic respiration is: Glucose --> energy + lactic acid
Aerobic respiration.