Photosynthesis: Products and Reactants | Cellular Respiration: Products and Reactants | Photosynthesis: Structure and Function | Cellular Respiration: Structures and Functions | Plant Structure and Adaptations |
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What is 12H2O+6CO2→C6H12O6+6O2+6H2O ?
What is the formula for photosynthesis?
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What is C6H12O6+6O2+6H2O→12H2O+6CO2 ?
What is the formula for Cellular Respiration?
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What are thylakoids?
The stroma is the space that surrounds …..
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What is the cytoplasm?
In what part of the cell does glycolysis takes place?
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What is Chlorophyll, Multicellularity, Xylem, Vascular System ?
Arrange the following adaptations for plant life on land in chronological order:
Xylem Multicellularity Vascular system Chlorophyll |
What is NADP ?
What is the name of the substance produced during the process of photosynthesis that serves as the final electron acceptor for cellular respiration?
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What is glycolysis?
During which metabolic stage is glucose broken down into pyruvate?
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What is chemiosmosis?
What is it called when electrons transport between PS II and PS I which generates a proton gradient?
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What is the inner mitochondrial membrane ?
Where do hydrogen ions move down their concentration gradient through ATP synthases?
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What is
-Root/shoot system -Naked seeds -Multicellularity ?
List three adaptations that occurred between flowering plants and protists.
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What are the light reactions?
Which stage of photosynthesis produces oxygen?
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What is Lactic Acid?
What is the product formed when muscles are exercised vigorously without sufficient oxygen?
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What is Absorb energy from photons to power light dependent reactions ?
chlorophyll a and b
How do pigments affect photosynthesis? Name 2 essential pigments to the plant.
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What is NADH and Pyruvate?
In addition to ATP, what are the end products of glycolysis?
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RuBP
Carbon fixation involved the addition of carbon dioxide to ……
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What is a molecule which has a glucose with a 6 carbon backbone and a phosphate attached to it ?
It is an intermediate of 12 PGAL
What does glucose-6-1-phosphate mean? What was is it an intermediate of?
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What is accepting electrons at the end of the electron transport chain?
The oxygen consumed during cellular respiration is involved directly in which process or event?
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What is Catalyzes reaction that allows Calvin Cycle to take place and attaches CO2 to RuBP to make PGA?
What is the function of rubisco?
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What is Bacteria are added to soaked grapes? They sustain aerobic respiration for some time. However, when the oxygen runs out of the barrel, the bacteria turn to alcoholic fermentation. Instead of going through the Krebs Cycle, acetaldehyde is formed out
How do you make wine out of grapes?
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What is CAM plants fix carbon from CO2 into 4-carbon oxaloacetate at night and undergo light reactions during the day while C4 plants fix CO2 all the time and store it as oxaloacetate in bundle-sheath cells ?
What is the difference between C4 plants and CAM plants?
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What is catabolic?
Which of the following is true about the Krebs cycle?
- Catabolic - Energy obtained from photons - Carbon fixation occurs during this cycle |
What is Electron Transport Chain?
Chemisosmosis ---> when hydrogen ions try to even out conecentration gradient and go through the ATP Sythase protein complex, the protein mechanically turns while pushing together ADP + Pi to create ATP
Which metabolic process produces the most ATP per glucose molecule? How?
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Light dependent:
- need energy from photons -Thylakoid -Can occur in light alone Light independent: - Needs NADPH and ATP produced in light dependent - Stroma - Can occur without light
List three differences between Light dependent reactions and Light independent reactions
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What is
-aerobic respiration -lactate fermentation -alcoholic fermentation From glycolysis in the cytoplasm, fermentation continues on in the cytoplasm while aerobic respiration moves on to the Krebs Cycle inside the mitochondria.
What are the 3 types of cellular respiration? What is the difference between aerobic respiration and fermentation, in regard to the location of the reactions?
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What is Dominant sporophyte generations evolved because fragile gametophytes were being destroyed quickly? With a dominant sporophyte generation, there was a higher probability that a seed would germinate.
What is the significance of producers’ evolution from a dominant gametophyte generation to a dominant sporophyte generation?
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