Yes, carbon dioxide is the only product of the Krebs cycle that is not reused or used in other stages of cellular respiration.
The carbon dioxide in cellular respiration comes from the breakdown of glucose molecules during the process. When glucose is broken down in the presence of oxygen, carbon dioxide is produced as a byproduct.
CO2 serves as an end product that is released from body tissues (cells) after cellular respiration is used to release the energy from an ATP molecule.
All of them. Carbon dioxide is produced by cellular respiration, which occurs in all organs.
yes. NO. Glycolysis does not produce carbon dioxide. In aerobic respiration, carbon dioxide is produced in the citric acid (or Krebs cycle) which is a different step of the metabolic breakdown of glucose.
C6H12O6 and O2 There are the reactants of cellular respiration and both are matter. The first is glucose, a sugar and carbohydrate and the second reactant is oxygen gas. So, your question is not really understandable.
Reactant- glucose and product- carbon dioxide.
Yes, both water and carbon dioxide are products of aerobic cellular respiration.
One waste product of cellular respiration is carbon dioxide.
The product is Carbon Dioxide.
Cellular respiration removes oxygen from the air and releases carbon dioxide as a waste product.
Carbon dioxide is a product of cellular respiration.
water, carbon dioxide, and entergy
Carbon dioxide is a product of cellular respiration but not fermentation. Fermentation produces alcohol or lactic acid as end products.
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide
water, carbon dioxide, and entergy