Plants!
Plants, algae, and cyanobacteria remove carbon dioxide gas from the air during photosynthesis. This process helps to convert carbon dioxide into glucose, which is used as energy and stored as carbohydrates in these organisms.
The carbon to produce carbohydrates in the second stage of photosynthesis comes from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. During the Calvin cycle, carbon dioxide is fixed and converted into glucose molecules that make up carbohydrates.
Yes. Carbon is the most abundant element found in living things.
When a organism dies and decays it emits carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide molecules (CO2) supply the carbon component of carbohydrates during the Calvin cycle. Carbon dioxide is fixed by the enzyme RuBisCO to form intermediate molecules that eventually lead to the production of glucose and other carbohydrates.
air that is purdused using photosynthisis
carbon dioxide water and oxygen
the reactants for photosynthesis would be water and carbon dioxide
the raw mertarials are carbon dioxide water,
Green plants take carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and using energy from the sun separate the carbon from the oxygen. They release the oxygen to the atmosphere, and use the carbon.
A living organism which uses sunlight as a source of energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into simple carbohydrates.
Plants, algae, and cyanobacteria remove carbon dioxide gas from the air during photosynthesis. This process helps to convert carbon dioxide into glucose, which is used as energy and stored as carbohydrates in these organisms.
The carbon to produce carbohydrates in the second stage of photosynthesis comes from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. During the Calvin cycle, carbon dioxide is fixed and converted into glucose molecules that make up carbohydrates.
From carbohydrates
Yes. Carbon is the most abundant element found in living things.
Autotroph
From carbohydrates