Carbon Dioxide. Animals exhale carbon dioxide as a product of respiration. Plants principally utilise carbon dioxide and produce oxygen through photosynthesis. Plants may also respire in the absence of adequate sunlight, which is why keeping plants in the bedroom is not always a good idea.
Cows release more carbon dioxide when they burp or release flatulence than a car does for a whole month....or something like that.
Green plants take in carbon dioxide during photosynthesis and give out oxygen. While respiration, all living organisms take in oxygen and carbon dioxide and then give out carbon dioxide.
No, it's the other way around. Plants intake Carbon dioxide and put out Oxygen. In the theory of how the world formed, this is how the atmosphere got to contain Oxygen, from plants spreading over the continents and producing Oxygen.
Carbon dioxide is removed naturally from the air by: * Plants (trees to algae) by way of photosynthesis * Dissolving in the ocean In industrial processes it is removed by: * Distillation or freezing * Alkaline scrubbing
Carbon Dioxide is needed for plants to make food.
No, plants do not convert carbon monoxide (CO) to carbon dioxide (CO2). Plants are able to absorb and store carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, but they do not have the ability to convert carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide. Carbon monoxide is typically produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels.
Carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide is a air which comes from the plants
carbon dioxide is produced by the plants during cellular respiration
Plants don't make carbon dioxide.
Plants get carbon dioxide from the air we exhale. We breath out carbon dioxide and plants give us oxygen. So when we breath oxygen the air that we exhale is carbon dioxide that goes to plants.
Animals breathe in oxygen and release carbon dioxide. Plants absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen.
Respiration - make carbon in carbon dioxide
No, because man and animals produce carbon dioxide and plants needs carbon dioxide.
Plants need carbon dioxide (CO2) gas to carry out photosynthesis, the process by which they make food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. During photosynthesis, plants convert carbon dioxide into carbohydrates to provide energy for growth and reproduction.
No, plants do not need carbon monoxide to survive. Carbon monoxide can actually be harmful to plants because it interferes with their ability to use carbon dioxide in photosynthesis.