34-36 ATP are made in the Krebs cycle part of cell respiration.
The third process of cellular respiration is the electron transport chain. In this step, electrons are transferred through a series of protein complexes in the inner mitochondrial membrane, generating ATP through chemiosmosis. This is the final stage of cellular respiration where most of the ATP is produced.
That is Carbon Dioxide. It is a bi product of respiration
The second main part of cellular respiration is the Krebs cycle, also known as the citric acid cycle. This cycle takes place in the mitochondria of cells and involves a series of chemical reactions that ultimately result in the production of ATP, carbon dioxide, and high-energy electrons.
Carbon dioxide is produced during the Krebs cycle, also known as the citric acid cycle, which takes place in the mitochondrial matrix of a cell during cellular respiration. During this cycle, carbon dioxide is released as a byproduct when acetyl-CoA is broken down to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Similarity: They are both cycles, therefore both have a reactant that s regenerated. In the Krebs Cycle, oxaloacetate is regenerated. In the Calvin cycle, RuBP is regenerated (ribulose 1, 5-bisphosphate). Difference: Glucose is completely broken down in the Krebs Cycle to carbon dioxide, which in the Calvin Cycle, glucose is made as a product.
Aerobic cellular respiration produces a total of around 36-38 molecules of ATP per glucose molecule. This occurs through a series of metabolic pathways, including glycolysis, the Krebs cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria.
Yes it does as these plants contain mitochondria that put some of the glucose made by photosynthesis into the cellular respiration cycle in the mitochondria.
Plants do excrete carbon dioxide as metabolic waste. Carbon dioxide is a waste product of aerobic cellular respiration, just like in humans. The carbon dioxide is excreted through the stomata on the plant's leaves.
The first set of reactions in cellular respiration is called glycolysis. This process takes place in the cytoplasm of the cell and breaks down glucose into pyruvate, producing a small amount of ATP in the process.
Cellular Respiration
The CO2 produced by the Krebs cycle is a waste product; it is disposed of as waste. In humans, we breath in oxygen with our lungs, use that oxygen in cellular respiration, and breath out the waste CO2. It should be noted that air is not made entirely of Oxygen and carbon dioxide, and that our bodies are not efficient enough to consume all of the available oxygen in each breath, and that therefore, what humans exhale is not 100% CO2.