An example of a carbohydrate.
What is sugar, glucose, or other -ose sugar?
The organelle where photosynthesis takes place.
What is chloroplast?
The organelle where cellular respiration takes place.
What is the mitochondria?
The pigment in chloroplasts that absorbs light for photosynthesis and gives plants their green color.
What is chlorophyll?
The ultimate source of energy for all life on Earth?
What is the sun/light energy?
The energy molecule of the cell?
What is ATP?
These are the two outputs of photosynthesis.
What are oxygen and glucose?
These are the two outputs of cellular respiration.
What are carbon dioxide and water?
Without oxygen.
What is anaerobic?
The product of fermentation in muscles cells that causes a stinging feeling.
What is lactic acid?
The carbohydrate (sugar) that is broken down in cellular respiration to produce ATP.
What is glucose?
These are the two inputs of Photosynthesis, in addition to light.
What are Carbon Dioxide and Water?
These are the two inputs of cellular respiration.
What are oxygen and glucose?
The process where food molecules are rearranged and energy is released.
What is cellular respiration?
In a forest ecosystem, these are the source of oxygen.
What are plants and/or trees?
These organisms can perform both cellular respiration and photosynthesis.
What are plants or algae?
This is from where plants get the carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.
What is the air/atmosphere?
What is food?
Another word for the "outputs" of a reaction.
What are products?
This is why the rate of photosynthesis in plants decreases at night.
This is the process that takes place in human cells when there is not enough oxygen for cell respiration.
What is lactic acid fermentation?
The color of light that is not absorbed for photosynthesis.
What is green?
This happens to food molecules when we eat and digest them.
What is the food molecules are rearranged to release energy?
The required substance that is in shortest supply and therefore limits growth or other life processes.
What is a limiting factor?
Why a person's heart rate increases during aerobic activity, such as running.