yes
No - glycolysis is anaerobic (it does occur in the presence of oxygen).
No. Glycolysis is anaerobic and do not require oxygen.
In organisms that undergo anaerobic respiration, glycolysis occurs, which does not require oxygen. After glycolysis, fermentation takes place to regenerate NAD+ for glycolysis to continue in the absence of oxygen. The citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation, which require oxygen, do not occur in anaerobic respiration.
It isn't, it is a strictly anaerobic process. However it may occur in organisms that use oxygen in a related process.
Anaerobic glycolysis primarily occurs in the cytoplasm of cells throughout the body, not specific to any particular organ. This process is used to generate energy when oxygen levels are low or unavailable.
Glycolysis is the breakdown of glucose. It can either be aerobic or anaerobic.
Cellular respiration sometimes is referred to as aerobic respiration, meaning that it occurs in the presence of oxygen, and is not an anaerobic process. Glycolysis is one of the processes in cellular respiration. In the final steps of glycolysis, two hydrogen atoms are removed from each three-carbon compound by bonding to free-floating oxygen atoms in the cytoplasm to form water.
Aerobic glycolysis requires oxygen to break down glucose into energy, producing a higher yield of ATP. Anaerobic glycolysis does not require oxygen and produces lactate as a byproduct, leading to a lower yield of ATP. Anaerobic glycolysis is used during intense or short-duration activities when oxygen supply is limited.
Glycolysis
Anaerobic glycolysis requires glucose and enzymes to produce ATP without the need for oxygen.
During glucose breakdown, glycolysis and fermentation occur anaerobically. Glycolysis breaks a glucose molecule into energy and pyruvate. Fermentation uses to the pyruvate to form either ethanol or lactate.
The anaerobic process that splits glucose into two molecules of pyruvic acid is called glycolysis. Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm of cells and is the first step in both aerobic and anaerobic respiration.