PlantsHumansFungiFishReptiles
go to the process of cellular respiration.
Yes, both plants and animals go through cellular respiration. This process involves breaking down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP, which is essential for the survival and functioning of all living organisms. In plants, cellular respiration occurs in mitochondria and chloroplasts, while in animals, it occurs primarily in mitochondria.
Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells. These organelles are responsible for producing energy in the form of ATP through the process of breaking down glucose molecules.
Aerobic cellular respiration occurs in the presence of oxygen and anaerobic cellular respiration occurs in the absence of oxygen. Without the presence of oxygen, cellular respiration cannot go past Glycolysis (the first step of cellular respiration) and will be forced to find an alternative route which is, fermentation. Hope this helped.
PlantsHumansFungiFishReptiles
Organisms that go through cellular respiration include plants, animals, fungi, and most bacteria. This process involves breaking down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP.
go to the process of cellular respiration.
Yes, both plants and animals go through cellular respiration. This process involves breaking down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP, which is essential for the survival and functioning of all living organisms. In plants, cellular respiration occurs in mitochondria and chloroplasts, while in animals, it occurs primarily in mitochondria.
All living things go through cellular respiration. All living things contain cells, and all cells use mitochondria, an organelle, to produce energy. Mitochondria take oxygen, O2, and glucose, C6H12O12, and convert it into water, H2O, carbon dioxide, CO2, and ATP. This is the formula for how all life produces energy through cellular respiration. C6H12O12 + 6O2 -------> 6H2O + 6CO2 + 38ATP
Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells. These organelles are responsible for producing energy in the form of ATP through the process of breaking down glucose molecules.
After a plant has completed photosynthesis, it has sugars and carbohydrates. Cellular respiration is the process of breaking down these sugars (glucose) and carbohydrates into chemical energy for the plant. Basically, photosynthesis is the process of getting the food, and cellular respiration is the actual eating of the food.
Plants, like the majority of evolved organisms, do use cellular respiration in order to convert energy stored in chemical bonds into usable energy. They do not use it for energy from the sun; this is photosynthesis. Plants do go through photosynthesis more than cellular respiration, so the net effect is a production of glucose and oxygen and consumption of water and carbon dioxide.
Aerobic cellular respiration produces a net gain of 36 ATP per glucose molecule. Anaerobic respiration produces a net gain of 2 ATP per glucose molecules.Aerobic cellular respiration produces 15 times more energy from sugar than anaerobic cellular respiration. :-)
In cellular respiration, oxygen gas is the most common final acceptor of the electrons. The hydrogens that go through the ATP synthase also link up with the oxygen so that water is produced.
Plants still go through cellular respiration, which requires only glucose molecules, not sunlight. In cellular respiration, the mitochondria in plant cells go through glycolysis, the Kreb's (Citric Acid) Cycle and oxidative phosphorylation to create from 36 to 38 ATP.
All cells must respire, as this is the way they obtain the energy to live.