That is done via metabolism.
Sugars
No, the process is to take in carbon dioxide with water and sunlight to make sugars; the by-product is oxygen.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) from the air.
Sugar is broken down with water to produce carbon dioxide. It is accompanied by release of chemical energy. This process is also termed respiration and is used in breathing process by animals.
During fermentation, yeast converts sugars in wort into alcohol (ethanol) and carbon dioxide through the process of anaerobic respiration. This process is facilitated by enzymes in the yeast that break down the sugars into simpler compounds, which are then further metabolized into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Convert simple sugars to alcohol, and creates the by-product of carbon-dioxide.
Carbon Dioxide, water, and ATP
Well, trees don't really store carbon dioxide; they use the carbon dioxide directly to produce sugars during the Calvin cycle. When decomposers eat up those sugars, they release the carbon in the sugars in the form of carbon dioxide.
photosynthesis
Sugars
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) from the air.
No, the process is to take in carbon dioxide with water and sunlight to make sugars; the by-product is oxygen.
Plants that lack chloroplasts cannot synthesize simple sugars via photosynthesis. Chlorophyll is essential in absorbing light energy that converts water and carbon dioxide to simple sugars. Oxygen is emitted in the process
Carbon Dioxide (CO2) from the air.
it gets it sugars by making it using water,sunlight, and carbon dioxide
During photosynthesis, plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) as a carbon source to produce sugars for energy. Carbon dioxide enters the plant through small openings on the leaves called stomata and is converted into sugars through the process of photosynthesis.
Carbon dioxide is an end product of the matabolism in humans and other higher animals. Sugars, fats and amino acids are broken down to produce energy for the body and carbon dioxide is an unwanted by-product which is returned to the lungs and exhaled.