A net total of 36-38 ATPs are released during aerobic respiration, while only 2 ATPs are released during anaerobic respiration.
4 ATP are produced and they will have a net-gain of 2
2 Atp molecule
Gross out put is 4 but net is 2 .
Glycolysis yields a net of 2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule.
The net production of ATP in glycolysis is 2 ATP molecules. This occurs through substrate-level phosphorylation during the conversion of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate to 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate, and from phosphoenolpyruvate to pyruvate.
Glycolosis
Only two ATPs are produced. It is a very low yeild
Glycolysis forms a net profit of two ATP molecules. Two ATPs are required to begin this process, and the product is four ATP molecules.
During glycolysis it makes a net amount of 2 molecules of ATP. Fermentation happens anaerobically (without oxygen) and the reduction of pyruvate into lactate itself does not yield any ATP. But I think the answer you are looking for is 2 ATP.
Glycolysis produces a net gain of 2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule.Two ATP molecules are expended in the early stages of glycolysis, but 4 are later generated, so the net gain is 2 ATP.This is a small number compared to the aerobic stage of cellular respiration, which probably produces about another 28 or 30 ATP molecules per glucose.true... it gives out energy and oxygen
The net gain of ATP from glycolysis is 2 molecules of ATP.