Anaerobic respiration is a metabolic process that occurs in the absence of oxygen, allowing cells to generate energy. It typically involves the breakdown of glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP, along with byproducts such as lactic acid in animals or ethanol and carbon dioxide in yeast and some bacteria. This process is less efficient than aerobic respiration, yielding only 2 ATP molecules per glucose molecule compared to 36-38 ATP molecules in aerobic respiration. Anaerobic respiration is crucial for organisms that thrive in low-oxygen environments or during short bursts of intense activity.
The Calvin cycle is a common method of photosynthesis, specifically the process by which plants, algae, and some bacteria convert carbon dioxide and energy from sunlight into glucose.
Anaerobic metabolism is a process used by cells to produce energy in the absence of oxygen. It involves the breakdown of glucose to generate ATP without using oxygen as the final electron acceptor. This process is less efficient than aerobic metabolism but is useful during high-intensity, short-duration activities.
A primary heterotroph is an organism that cannot produce its own food through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis and must consume other organisms or organic matter to obtain energy. This includes animals, fungi, and certain types of bacteria that rely on external sources of organic nutrients for survival.
Animals, including humans, cannot make glucose from carbon dioxide and water because they lack the necessary enzymes and metabolic pathways for photosynthesis. Instead, animals obtain glucose by consuming plants or other animals that have already synthesized glucose through photosynthesis.
Per molecule of glucose aerobic respiration generates a total of 36ATP molecules while anarobic generates 2 ATP molecules?
photosynthesis
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Anarobic
no
Oxygen
Krebs cycle, aka citrus acid cycle
Carbon dioxide and water. Look here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellular_respiration
The end products of regular respiration are carbon dioxide, water and energy.
they eat some foods contain a lot of glucose which is used by the body for both aerobic and aerobic respration.
Air low in oxygen and rich in carbon-dioxide, reflecting the blood coming to the lungs to expel its load of CO2 waste, and take on a fresh charge of O2.
Both aerobic and anaerobic respiration are processes that break down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP. The main difference is that aerobic respiration requires oxygen, while anaerobic respiration does not. Aerobic respiration produces more ATP per glucose molecule compared to anaerobic respiration.
Amanda Trevett has written: 'The anarobic and aerobic energy contributions of female hockey players to the Wingate anaerobic test and to an intermittent sprint test on the cycle ergometer'