no
Carbon dioxide is absorbed by plants during the day through the process of photosynthesis. This is because plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into sugars for growth and energy production. At night, plants respire and release some carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere.
Organisms like humans, animals, and plants release carbon dioxide as a byproduct of respiration. Additionally, decomposers such as bacteria and fungi also release carbon dioxide during the decomposition process.
Green plants give out carbon dioxide during cellular respiration, a process where they break down glucose to release energy. This occurs primarily at night when photosynthesis is not taking place. However, overall, green plants absorb more carbon dioxide during photosynthesis than they release during respiration.
During the day, a tree will take in carbon dioxide to use in photosynthesis, and give off oxygen created in the process. At night, when there is no sunlight to power photosynthesis, trees get energy through cellular respiration, oxidizing some of their stored carbohydrates. Thus at night they take in oxygen and give off carbon dioxide.
Yes, algae can produce carbon dioxide through respiration when they consume oxygen for energy production. However, algae also absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, where they convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and glucose in the presence of sunlight.
Carbon dioxide is absorbed by plants during the day through the process of photosynthesis. This is because plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide into sugars for growth and energy production. At night, plants respire and release some carbon dioxide back into the atmosphere.
Trees let out carbon dioxide more in the night. This is because the trees trunks are able to suck in more of the carbon dioxide that has been released during the day in the night. Therefore, during the night time, the trees are changing the carbon dioxide into the oxygen we need and the water that it needs for itself. Hope this helps. :)
Mostly during night
In general, plants either produce oxygen or produce carbon dioxide, but not both at the same time. During the daytime plants use sunlight (or other sources of light) to support photosynthesis where carbon dioxide is taken in and oxygen is generated. At night (or when it is dark) plants take in oxygen and generate carbon dioxide.
Both
carbon dioxide
Organisms like humans, animals, and plants release carbon dioxide as a byproduct of respiration. Additionally, decomposers such as bacteria and fungi also release carbon dioxide during the decomposition process.
During the night, plants take in oxygen and release carbon dioxide through a process called respiration. This is because photosynthesis, the process through which plants take in carbon dioxide and produce oxygen, is not occurring in darkness.
Green plants give out carbon dioxide during cellular respiration, a process where they break down glucose to release energy. This occurs primarily at night when photosynthesis is not taking place. However, overall, green plants absorb more carbon dioxide during photosynthesis than they release during respiration.
Plants release carbon dioxide during respiration, which occurs both day and night. In the presence of sunlight, plants undergo photosynthesis, where they absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen. The amount of oxygen released during photosynthesis is usually more than the carbon dioxide released during respiration, so there should not be a significant reduction in oxygen levels in a bedroom at night due to plants.
Plants use carbon dioxide in the daytime as part of photosynthesis which occurs in the chloroplast. They use the CO2 and make sugars. People breath in oxygen and breath out carbon dioxide, plants do the opposite. They breath in carbon dioxide and breath out oxygen.One small "technical" detail that should be mentioned. Plants really don't breath, they respire. People breath.So, at the night, the plant cells respire more than they photosynthesise, so they get rid of more carbon dioxide than oxygen.
During the night