Photosynthesis
Aerobic Respiration
Anaerobic Respiration
Metabolism
Wild
100

Name the inputs and outputs of photosynthesis

Inputs: CO2, H2O, sunlight

Outputs: Glucose, O2

100

Name the inputs and outputs of aerobic cellular respiration

Inputs: Glucose, O2

Outputs: CO2, H2O, ATP

100

Name the inputs and outputs of anaerobic respiration

Inputs: Glucose

Outputs: Lactic acid or ethanol & CO2, ATP

100

What are the four macromolecules?

Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids

100

What is the role of NADPH, NADH, etc?

To transfer electrons between different stages of photosynthesis and cellular respiration

200

Why are animals MORE dependent on plants than plants are on animals?

Plants produce glucose that animals require for ATP

200

Name the four stages of aerobic respiration in order

Glycolysis, link reaction, krebs cycle, ETC

200

Name two pros and two cons of anaerobic respiration

Pros

- Quick

- Emergency ATP source

- No organelles required

Cons

- Only 2 ATP produced

- Buildup of harmful byproducts

200

What chemical elements do all macromolecules have in common?

C, H, O

200

Why do plants need to do cellular respiration in addition to photosynthesis?

Plants need to be able to break down glucose to obtain ATP
300

What would happen to a plant under green light, and why?

The plant would die because it cannot absorb green light, meaning it cannot do photosynthesis

300

Which stage of cellular respiration produces the majority of ATP?

ETC

300
What is the purpose of the fermentation step of anaerobic respiration?

To regenerate NAD+ so that glycolysis can continue to happen

300

Humans' preferred source of ATP is carbohydrates. Why do we also require fats and proteins?

They provide important building blocks for our bodies (enzymes, muscles, cell membranes, etc) and serve important functions (vitamin absorption, satiation, etc)
300

Name two ways to reduce atmospheric CO2 levels

- More plants

- Less animals

- Less burning fossil fuels

400

Describe where and how each input and output of photosynthesis are involved in the process.

H2O is split into O2 and Hs at the ETC in the thylakoid during the light dependent reactions. CO2 goes into the calvin cycle to be built into a glucose molecule in the stroma.

400

Which stage of cellular respiration is directly impacted by lack of oxygen?

ETC

400

What are two reasons why anaerobic respiration is believed to have evolved before aerobic?

- Low oxygen in early earth

- Prokaryotes (no organelles) precede eukaryotes (organelles)

400

You eat a piece of toast and then do not eat for the rest of the week. Describe in order what sources your body will use for its energy needs.

Blood glucose, glycogen stores, fat (and maybe muscle) stores

400

Why does a banana tree need much more sunlight than a houseplant?

Bananas contain a lot of glucose --> more photosynthesis needs to occur in order to produce this --> more sunlight is required 

500

Why would plants on the forest floor where there is less light be dark green compared to desert plants that are light green?

High amounts of chlorophyll, which allows them to absorb as much of the scarce sunlight they receive as possible.

500

Give three examples of how the different stages of cellular respiration depend on each other

- The link reaction turns pyruvate from glycolysis into acetyl coA, which is used by krebs

- Glycolysis, link, and krebs produce electron carriers that deliver to the ETC

- Electron carriers are regenerated by the ETC and sent back to glycolysis, link, and krebs

500

Why are yeast, a unicellular organism with mitochondria, able to survive on anaerobic only if necessary?

They are only one cell, meaning their ATP demand is lower than a multicellular organism

500

When proteins and fats need to be used for energy (ATP), what molecule are they turned into?

Acetyl CoA (which is sent to the krebs cycle)

500

Describe in detail how an ETC is able to make ATP.

A molecule delivers electrons to the ETC. A series of proteins pass electrons down the chain, which gives them the energy to pump H+ to high concentration on one side. This H+ then flows back down to the low concentration side through ATP synthase, which gives it the energy to make ATP. A molecule must accept electrons at the end of the chain.

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