What is mitochondria?
CO2, H2O, Light energy
What are the reactants of photosynthesis?
Glucose and Oxygen
What are the reactants of cellular respiration?
Means "without oxygen"
What does anaerobic mean?
Makes the least amount of ATP
What is anaerobic respiration?
Performs photosynthesis
Used in Respiration to make ATP
What is glucose used for after being created in photosynthesis?
Both Animals and Plants can do this
Who can do cellular respiration? Plants or animals?
CO2 and Ethanol and ATP
What are the products of anaerobic respiration?
Chloroplasts and Mitochondria work together
What two organelles work together in a cycle?
Boxy in shape/Cell Wall/chloroplast/Large Vacuole
What are the defining features of a plant cell?
Photosynthesis happens here
What is a chloroplast?
Respiration takes place here
What is mitochondria?
Balloon Inflation because of the CO2 from the anaerobic demo
To convert glucose into ATP at night or when no sunlight
Why do plants still need mitochondria even though they photosynthesize?
Stores and controls DNA
What does the Nucleus do?
Light energy transforms into chemical energy stored in glucose
What is the process of photosynthesis
They need more ATP for movement and energy?
Why do muscle cells need more mitochondria?
Lactic Acid Fermentation
What type of fermentation happens in muscles?
Lactic acid builds up from anaerobic respiration
When you sprint and run out of oxygen, why might your muscles burn?
Packages Proteins
The yellow BTB turning to blue represents this.
How did you know photosynthesis took place in the BTB experiment?
This process makes the most amount of ATP
What is Aerobic respiration?
Sugar = used in anaerobic respiration to make ATP & CO₂; sweetener can't be broken down as easily
Why did the sugar have a bigger reaction than the sweetener?
Atoms in reactants rearrange into products — no atoms created or destroyed
What is the Law of Conservation of matter?