This organelle is responsible for cellular respiration.
What are mitochondria?
The name of the two reactants in photosynthesis.
What is carbon dioxide and water?
The names of the two reactants in cellular respiration.
What are sugar and oxygen?
The two possible types of genetic material.
What are DNA and RNA?
The monomer of carbohydrates.
What is glucose?
These organelles are small structures containing the green pigment called chlorophyll.
What are chloroplasts?
The name of the two products of photosynthesis.
What are sugar and breathable oxygen?
The names of the two products in cellular respiration.
What are carbon dioxide and water?
The condition of trying to maintain a fairly stable internal environment.
What is homeostasis?
The monomer of proteins.
What are amino acids?
This is the area where glycolysis takes place.
What is the cytoplasm?
The pigment used to absorb light to power photosynthesis.
What is chlorophyll?
The second stage of cellular respiration occurs here, where large amounts of ATP are created.
What is the mitochondrial matrix?
The feature that divides prokaryotes from eukaryotes.
What are membrane bound organelle (nucleus)?
The monomers of lipids.
What are fatty acids and glycerol?
This cell type does contain a nucleus.
What is a eukaryotic cell?
The molecule that plants get the oxygen they release.
What is water?
This process provides energy for cells WITHOUT using oxygen.
What is fermentation?
The movement of material from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration?
What is diffusion?
The molecules responsible for controlling the rate of a reaction in living things.
What are enzymes?
This cell type does not contain a nucleus.
What is a prokaryotic cell?
The equation for photosynthesis.
What is 6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2?
When your cells are not getting enough oxygen during rigorous exercise, fermentation occurs to ensure that your cells get the energy they need. Your muscles burn when this builds up in your muscle cells.
What is lactic acid?
The movement of material from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration over a selectively permeable membrane.
What is osmosis?
The type of bond that makes surface tension possible.
What are hydrogen bonds?