The correct sequence of stages in cellular respiration is glycolysis, Krebs cycle and then electron transport chain. However, this will depend on whether the respiration is anaerobic or aerobic.
fermentation is entirely anaerobic wheras cellular respiration only has 1 out of 3 stages that is anaerobic, the other 2 being aerobic (need oxygen to carry out rweactions. from this you can tell what anaerobic must mean:) i hope this helps:D
It is the glycolisis. It is common to both aerobic and anaerobic respiration
In organisms that undergo anaerobic respiration, glycolysis occurs, which does not require oxygen. After glycolysis, fermentation takes place to regenerate NAD+ for glycolysis to continue in the absence of oxygen. The citric acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation, which require oxygen, do not occur in anaerobic respiration.
Anaerobic respiration produces less energy compared to aerobic respiration because oxygen is not involved in the final stages of energy production. This results in the inefficient breakdown of glucose and the production of less ATP per glucose molecule.
cellular respiration: anaerobic:: fermentation :anaerobic
anaerobic respiration there is also fermentation, which is like anaerobic respiration but does not have an electron transport chain
anaerobic cellular respiration has 3 different stages, and their final electron acceptors are: pyruvate oxidation- NAD+ Krebs cycle- NAD+, FAD+ electron transport chain- Oxygen
Anaerobic respiration occurs in the absence of oxygen.
Anaerobic respiration is most common in microorganisms.
Aerobic respiration requires oxygen and Anaerobic respiration does not require oxygen!
Respiration with oxygen is called aerobic respiration, and respiration without oxygen is called anaerobic respiration. Aerobic respiration produces more energy than anaerobic respiration.