Movement of water into a cell through the cell membrane
What is osmosis?
What form of energy is first needed for photosynthesis?
What is sunlight/radiant energy?
This unit of energy is produced by cells in cellular respiration.
What is ATP?
In prokaryotes/bacteria cells, this process is how new organisms are produced.
What is binary fission?
The structure in which genetic information/DNA is stored in the nucleus.
What is chromosome?
Movement of small particles from an area of great concentration to an area of lesser concentration
What is diffusion?
This energy processes cause of bread rising
Photosynthesis???
Fermentation???
Respiration???
What is fermentation?
The parent cell(s) involved when plants under go sexual reproduction.
What are pollen and/or ovules?
The process where the cytoplasm is divided into two cells.
What is cytokinesis?
This cell transport does not require energy.
What is passive transport?
The organelle in which cellular respiration takes place in Eukaryotic cells.
What is mitochondria?
The process that produces identical copies of the parent cell/DNA. Has only 1 parent
What is asexual reproduction?
The four phases of Mitosis is
What is Prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase?
Large particles moving out of a cell from high concentration to low concentration.
What is exocytosis?
This chemical/pigment is necessary for photosynthesis in chloroplasts.
What is chlorophyll?
What product is produced in cellular respiration but is not needed by animals?
What is carbon dioxide?
This kind of cell division produces new bone cells when a human breaks an ankle.
Mitosis???
Meiosis???
What is mitosis?
The stage in which chromosomes line up in the middle
What is Metaphase?
Cell transport occurs through this cell part.
What is a semipermeable cell membrane?
This compound is needed for photosynthesis and is the universl solvent.
What is water?
Plant cells get ATP energy in this organelle.
What is mitochondria?
Yeast and spider plants reproduce asexually by growing a smaller version of the adult organism off the side of the parent until fully grown. It is idential to the parent's DNA. This type of reproduction is called ___
Binary fission, Regeneration or Budding
What is budding?
The phase in which the sister chromatids pull apart.
What is anaphase?