Light-
Independent
Reactions
Light-
Dependent
Reactions
Glycolysis
Krebs Cycle
Electron
Transport
Chain
100
The alternative name for the light-independent reactions.
What is the Calvin Cycle?
100
Where the light-dependent reactions take place.
What are the chloroplasts?
100
Where glycolysis takes place.
What is the cytoplasm?
100
The organelle where the Krebs Cycle takes place.
What is the mitochondrion?
100
The place where the ETC takes place in photosynthesis and where it takes place in cellular respiration.
What are the thylakoid discs and in the mitochondrion.
200
The product of the light-independent reactions.
What are sugars?
200
The waste product of the light-dependent reactions.
What is oxygen?
200
The two types of fermentation.
What are lactic acid fermentation and alcoholic fermentation?
200
The products of the Krebs cycle.
What are ATP and CO2?
200
The products of the ETC in cellular respiration.
What are water and ATP?
300
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY* The two high energy molecules that are used from the light-dependent reactions.
What are NADPH and ATP?
300
The wavelength color least effective on plants.
What is green?
300
The net amount of ATP produced in glycolysis.
What is 2 ATP?
300
The high energy molecules created from the Krebs Cycle.
What are NADH, FADH2 and ATP?
300
In this process, the ETC strips high energy molecules of their electrons.
What is cellular respiration?
400
What the Calvin cycle does NOT require.
What is light?
400
This is a stack of thylakoid discs.
What is the granum?
400
Glycolysis can also happen in this anaerobic process.
What is fermentation?
400
This is the amount of ATP created from aerobic respiration.
What is 36?
400
In this process, electrons move through "systems" to gain energy.
What is photosynthesis?
500
These are molecules that the Calvin cycle returns to the light-dependent reactions.
What are NADP+ and ADP+P?
500
This pigment breaks down in the winter to make trees "blush".
What is chlorophyll?
500
Glucose splits in two to create this product.
What is pyruvic acid?
500
The ratio of carbon to hydrogen to oxygen in glucose.
What is 1:2:1?
500
The final acceptor of electrons in the ETC in cellular respiration.
What is oxygen?