Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Photosynthesis and Respiration
Advertisements

Cellular Respiration Biology.
Cellular Respiration & Fermantation
Cell Energy: Photosynthesis & Respiration. How Does a Plant Make It’s Own Food? Plants use carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), water (H 2 O), and sun’s energy to.
Cellular Respiration Overview Living things get most of the energy they need from glucose. Autrotrophs make glucose using photosynthesis Heterotrophs get.
Cell Energy. Energy from the sun Plants use the sun’s energy to make sugar. The sugar is called “glucose”. Glucose is stored in the plant and used by.
Cellular Respiration: How you get Energy. Review: Producers  Producers get their energy from the sun.  Producers convert this light energy into stored.
Biology Science Department Deerfield High School Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration.
CELLULAR RESPIRATION. Process used by ALL organisms perform to make energy for the cell MITOCHONDRIA perform cellular respiration Energy that the cells.
CELL ENERGY CELL ENERGY Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration Where does energy come from?
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Review Game.
 Energy in food is stored as carbohydrates, proteins & fats. Before you can use that energy, it must be released and transferred to ATP.
Cellular Respiration Energy Connection Energy Transformation
Cell Energy. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) A molecule of energy which is created by the mitochondria when the cell undergoes cellular respiration.
RESPIRATION breakingfood release energy 1. The process of breaking down food molecules to release energy. 2. Convertsglucose ATP 2. Converts the energy.
Cell Energy Chapter 3. Cells need energy in order to work properly Plant cells get energy through photosynthesis, which happens in the chloroplast Animal.
Cellular Respiration. Review: Producers Producers use light energy from the sun to make chemical energy (glucose).
How do our bodies take food and make it into energy?
Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND RESPIRATION.
Energy in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
Photosynthesis and Respiration
Cellular Respiration.
Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
Photosynthesis and cellular respiration STAAR review
Cellular Respiration (Aerobic).
Cellular Respiration (Aerobic).
Cellular Respiration.
Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
The Cell.
SG 4.2 notes Ideas about targets and terms:________________ All cells use energy to live, grow and reproduce Producers capture light energy from sun to.
Cellular Respiration.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS CELLULAR RESPIRATION
LEC: Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
LEC: Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
Flow of Energy through the Respiration Process
Cell Energy.
Cellular Respiration Vocabulary Glycolysis Cellular respiration
LEC: Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
Notes: Cellular Respiration
Respiration and Fermentation Notes
Photosynthesis and Cell Respiration
Objective SWBAT explain cellular respiration and compare it to photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis and Respiration
ADP, ATP and Cellular Respiration
Photosynthesis VS Cellular Respiration Foldable
Chapter 2 lesson 4 TB. Pg Prepared by Ms. Uzma Grade 7 Science
DO NOW What does photosynthesis produce?
Unit 1 Lesson 6 Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Cellular Respiration!.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS & RESPIRATION
Getting Energy From Food
Cellular Respiration Textbook chapter 9.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Cellular Respiration Let’s get energized!
Cellular Respiration.
LEC: Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration
Cellular respiration Chapter 3 section 4.
The Cell’s Energy.
How do our bodies take food and make it into energy?
Cellular Respiration.
Aerobic Cellular Respiration
Cell Energy.
(3-4) Cellular Respiration
Section 4:2 Cell Energy.
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
Photosynthesis and Respiration
Section 2-3: energy Essential Question
Presentation transcript:

Energy Transformations in Living Organisms: Cellular Respiration

Review: Producers Producers get their energy from the sun. Producers convert this light energy into stored chemical energy (glucose). This process is called photosynthesis.

Review: Consumers Consumers get their energy from the producers. Consumers convert stored chemical energy (glucose) into usable chemical energy (ATP). This process is called cellular respiration.

Cellular Respiration (aerobic) Cellular respiration is the process by which glucose (C6H12O6) is broken down to release energy for making ATP, another form of chemical energy.

Aerobic Respiration – Equation C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 H2O + 6 CO2 + 36 ATP food (glucose, a carbohydrate) oxygen water carbon dioxide

BioTheme: Interdependence! Photosynthesis: 6 H2O + 6 CO2 + energy (sun) → C6H12O6 + 6 O2 Aerobic Cellular Respiration: C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 H2O + 6 CO2 + energy (ATP)

Why ATP? An analogy to money… Glucose in our food is a great source of energy! ($100 bill) However, individual cell processes may only require a small amount of energy ($1 bill) Analogy: most vending machines do not accept $100 bills! We need a smaller form of “currency” for these processes. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is this important cellular “currency” for life. ATP releases more appropriate amounts of energy for the individual cellular processes that require energy.

Do only animals respire? Or do plants respire too? The BIG Question is… Do only animals respire? Or do plants respire too? Only plants perform photosynthesis Plants AND animals perform cellular respiration! (Can you explain why??)

Site of Cellular Respiration Plant and animal cells contain mitochondria: cell structures that transform chemical energy from glucose to ATP.

Significant ATP Production Aerobic cellular respiration releases energy SLOWLY, using oxygen to convert ONE molecule of glucose to 36 ATP!

Cellular Respiration (anaerobic) What happens when cells don’t have enough oxygen? Some organisms live in an oxygen-free environment. How do they get their energy?

Cellular Respiration (anaerobic) Anaerobic respiration is also called fermentation, or the process by which energy is released from glucose when oxygen is NOT available. This process allows organisms to continue to produce energy until oxygen is available. However, this process only releases 2 ATP per molecule of glucose.

Strenuous Exercise Lactic acid is produced by your muscle cells during rapid exercise when the body cannot supply enough O2 to tissues. Without enough O2, the body is NOT able to produce all of the ATP that is required. The buildup of lactic acid can cause painful burning in your muscles!

Minimal ATP Production In the absence of oxygen, anaerobic respiration only releases 2 ATP for each molecule of glucose broken down.

Comparing ATP Production First, your body breaks down glucose through aerobic respiration to produce 36 ATP per glucose molecule; however, this is a slow process. When muscle cells cannot get enough O2 they break down glucose through lactic acid fermentation to produce 2 ATP per glucose… Therefore, AEROBIC RESPIRATION is much more efficient in terms of ATP production – 36 ATP compared to 2 ATP!

Aerobic Training Ex: long runs, biking, swimming Can increase the size and number of mitochondria in muscle cells Can increase the delivery of O2 to muscles by improving the heart and lungs

Anaerobic Training Ex: sprints, strides, quick bursts of energy Increase the glycogen levels in the muscles Increase body’s tolerance to lactic acid