In the stroma
Glucose is not directly made in the stroma of plants. Glucose is produced during the process of photosynthesis in the chloroplasts of plant cells, which contain chlorophyll and other necessary enzymes. The stroma of the chloroplasts is where the Calvin cycle, a series of biochemical reactions, takes place to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose.
The stroma
It is the stroma. It is the chloroplast cytoplasm
Stroma
In the stroma
Glucose is not directly made in the stroma of plants. Glucose is produced during the process of photosynthesis in the chloroplasts of plant cells, which contain chlorophyll and other necessary enzymes. The stroma of the chloroplasts is where the Calvin cycle, a series of biochemical reactions, takes place to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose.
Chloroplast
The stroma
It is the stroma. It is the chloroplast cytoplasm
Stroma
stroma
The Calvin cycle, which is the process of carbon fixation in photosynthesis, occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast. This is where the enzymes and molecules involved in the cycle are located, allowing for the conversion of carbon dioxide into glucose.
The production of glucose takes place during the light independent reactions (Calvin cycle) in the stroma of the chloroplast.
The storage of chemical energy in glucose molecules occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast. This is where the Calvin cycle takes place, converting carbon dioxide and light energy into glucose through a series of chemical reactions.
It is the dark reaction.It takes place in stroma.
Glucose is made during the light-independent reactions (Calvin cycle) of photosynthesis, where carbon dioxide is converted into glucose using ATP and NADPH produced during the light-dependent reactions.