Cheamoheterotrops
A photoautotroph gets its energy initially from light, and its carbon from carbon dioxide.
Photoautotroph
photoheterotroph
Animals do not use an inorganic source of carbon as their sole source. They obtain carbon from organic sources such as plants and other animals.
After the glucose is eaten and digested and metabolized, the carbon atoms in the glucose will wind up in the form of carbon dioxide.
A photoautotroph gets its energy initially from light, and its carbon from carbon dioxide.
Photoautotroph
photoheterotroph
Carbon dioxide levels influence how many sugars(glucose) a plant can produce greatly. This is because 6 molecules of water and 6 molecules of carbon dioxide will release a sugar through series of reactions. So if you have many carbon dioxide molecules it makes it a lot easier for a plant or any other photoautotroph.
Bacillus subtilis is not a photoautotroph.
Animals do not use an inorganic source of carbon as their sole source. They obtain carbon from organic sources such as plants and other animals.
Carbon dioxide provides the carbon needed to synthesize glucose.
Glucose is an organic compound because glucose contains carbon and organic compounds contain carbon.
Answer: A Photoheterotroph Feedback: *Energy source: -Phototroph: uses light -Chemotroph: uses redox reactions from an organic or inorganic compound *Carbon source: -Autotroph: uses CO2 -Heterotroph: uses an organic source of carbon
Glucose is not made of carbon dioxide. Glucose is a simple sugar molecule composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms. The carbon atoms in glucose are typically derived from carbon dioxide during the process of photosynthesis in plants.
in glucose it is carbon# 1... and in fructose it is carbon# 2... becoz aldehyde and ketone group of glucose and fructose are attached to ist and 2nd carbon respectivally....
Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy/ATP