Cellular Respiration In Plants And Animals

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Cellular Respiration In Plants And Animals. Plants on earth use photosynthesis to produce the molecules necessary for animals to live. Illustration of the interdependence of the cellular respiration processes in animal cells and plant cells.

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Animals get their energy by eating food, digesting it, and turning it into the base sugars, proteins, and lipids that the cells can burn to perform cellular respiration (which makes atp). While both plants and animals carry out cellular respiration, only plants conduct photosynthesis to make their own food. In this process of cellular respiration, plants generate glucose molecules through.

Cellular respiration is the process through which cells convert sugars into energy.

Both plant and animal cells require oxygen for aerobic cellular respiration, which occurs within the mitochondria which are found in both plant and animal cells. Amino acids and proteins can be used when we eat excess or run out of carbs and lipids. In plants, most of the living cells are present towards the leaf surface. All living organisms carry out some form of cellular respiration.

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