Most of the worlds oxygen is produced by Trees.
Contrary to popular secular belief, tree's don't actually produce the majority of the worlds oxygen, in fact, approximately 91.6% of the worlds oxygen is produced by phytoplankton blooms in the northern hemisphere of the ocean.
0.01 percent of the worlds oxygen is from the amazon
It would be Point C
No, oxygen is not produced by wind. Oxygen is produced by plants during the process of photosynthesis, where they convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and glucose with the help of sunlight. Wind is simply the movement of air in the atmosphere.
In the process of photosynthesis, the most oxygen is produced during the light-dependent reactions, specifically in the photosystem II complex where water molecules are split to release oxygen as a byproduct.
Most of the world's oxygen is produced by phytoplankton in the ocean. These microscopic marine plants carry out photosynthesis, using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. Phytoplankton play a vital role in producing oxygen and supporting marine ecosystems.
wheat
seaweed
To me the answer to this question is starch
plants
a lot of oxygen! that's where most of it comes from!
Contrary to popular secular belief, tree's don't actually produce the majority of the worlds oxygen, in fact, approximately 91.6% of the worlds oxygen is produced by phytoplankton blooms in the northern hemisphere of the ocean.
No , most of Protozoa are not photosynthetic hence can't produce O2 .
there would be no shade, nothing holding the top soil down and blocking the wind, creating a desert, and oxygen levels would go down. not dissapear, because most of the worlds oxygen is produced by algae in the oceans, not by trees
0.01 percent of the worlds oxygen is from the amazon
The Honda 50cc single cylinder OHC engine (Supercub) is the world's most produced engine (over 80 million units)
By plants and planktonMost of the Earth's oxygen is produced by plants, both on surface and under water. Algae.