No, Carbon dioxide is used by the plant to produce sugars during photosysnthesis. In this reaction Oxygen is a waste or by-product
There are a handful of waste products that are products of a plant's respiration. Oxygen is one such waste product.
One waste product of cellular respiration is carbon dioxide.
Photosynthesis uses carbon dioxide and water, releasing oxygen as a waste product.
Plants use carbon dioxide to make food and grow, and they give off oxygen as a waste product. Animals, however, need that oxygen to live.
The role of carbon dioxide in photosynthesis is in the creation of molecules that are used to make food for the plants. In cellular respiration, carbon dioxide is emitted as a waste product that is used by photosynthesizing cells to create new carbohydrates.
They intake Carbon Dioxide and exhale Oxygen as a waste product.
They intake Carbon Dioxide and exhale Oxygen as a waste product.
No, in plants carbon dioxide is a raw material, or reactant, for photosynthesis. Plants take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen. For animals, is is just a waste product.
The plants use carbon dioxide in photosynthesis. Photosynthesis uses carbon dioxide and water, releasing oxygen as a waste product.
An example is carbon dioxide being emitted from car exhausts. Hope that helped.
Carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a waste product produced by animals (including humans of course) during respiration. Plants use this as part of the process of photosynthesis, which in turn creates oxygen (as a waste product).
Carbon dioxide :)
Oxygen
Most of our oxygen we breathe has been emitted by plants because instead of breathing oxygen and breathing out carbon dioxide, they breathe carbon dioxide and breathe out oxygen as a waste product.
There are a handful of waste products that are products of a plant's respiration. Oxygen is one such waste product.
That depends. Plants both respire and photosynthesise. In the former, the "waste" product is carbon dioxide. The latter produces oxygen as a by-product.
Carbon Dioxide in humans and Oxygen in plants