Plants take in carbon dioxide and fix it as plant tissue. Primary consumers eat the plants and take in the carbon which is then passed along to a secondary consumer.
The products of cellular respiration are water and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is taken away from the cell by the bloodstream and carried to the lungs, where it is expelled when you exhale. The water simply becomes part of the water in your body. The human body is mostly water anyway.
The lungs. It's part of your respiratory. your heart also helps, and it's part of the cardiovascular system
The reference carbon atom in sugars is typically the anomeric carbon, which is the carbon atom that becomes a part of the glycosidic bond when sugars are linked together. In a simple sugar like glucose, the anomeric carbon is the first carbon in the ring structure.
According to this rule "in case of Asymmetric alkenes the negative part of 'addandum' molecule becomes attached to that carbon atom which has the least number of hydrogens OR the positive part becomes attached to that carbon atom which has the higher number of hydrogens. This rule is based upon stability of carbonium ion formed during the reaction.
This movement is evaporation, and is part of the carbon cycle.
The products of cellular respiration are water and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is taken away from the cell by the bloodstream and carried to the lungs, where it is expelled when you exhale. The water simply becomes part of the water in your body. The human body is mostly water anyway.
True! The carbon that was in a plant becomes part of the soil when the plant dies and decomposes.
All living things are made of carbon. Carbon is a part of the ocean, air, and even rocks. Because the Earth is always moving, carbon does not stay still. In the atmosphere, carbon is attached to some oxygen in a gas called carbon dioxide. Plants take in carbon from the air, and use it to grow and breathe. When animals eat plants with lots of carbon, the carbon becomes part of the animal, and use it to grow.
The aorta realeases the carbon dioxide!!-CooKi3 MoNsTeR=)
your lungs
No, they are carbon-based as is all life on earth (as we know it). They do have silica as part of their body, but the main part is carbon.
The lungs are a part of the pneumatic system in the body. They are responsible for exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide during breathing.
The lungs is the part of the nervous body system. It helps in take in oxygen and give out carbon dioxide.------------------------------------------The lungs are part of the nervous system when you scream or talk. It is part of the respiratory system for when you breath in oxygen. It is part of the excretory system for when you breath out carbon dioxide.
the carbon gets passed along to another animal who eats the human or animal same with humans if the human eats an animal they get carbon. The carbon is and remains part of the organic matter making up the plant or animal. When eaten by another animal, it becomes part of the other animal. Otherwise the material remains on the ground where it remains and is consumed/processed by insects, mold, and bacteria and it becomes part of the insects/mold/bacteria until it dies. What is eventually left on the ground becomes part of the soil which nurtures growing plants, animals, and then the cycle repeats and continues.
the carbon gets passed along to another animal who eats the human or animal same with humans if the human eats an animal they get carbon. The carbon is and remains part of the organic matter making up the plant or animal. When eaten by another animal, it becomes part of the other animal. Otherwise the material remains on the ground where it remains and is consumed/processed by insects, mold, and bacteria and it becomes part of the insects/mold/bacteria until it dies. What is eventually left on the ground becomes part of the soil which nurtures growing plants, animals, and then the cycle repeats and continues.
The lungs. It's part of your respiratory. your heart also helps, and it's part of the cardiovascular system
yes carbon is a part of organic compound. but there are inorganic compounds also containing carbon (such as carbonates, bicarbonates etc).