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A couple of questions:

What is the process called where the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere remains relatively constant at about 0.4% as a resuly of established equilibrium?

What is the most important result from the process of cellular respiration?

An increase in the concentration of ATP in a muscle cell is a direct result of which life function?

THANKS SO MUCH!

2007-03-04 10:26:46 · 2 answers · asked by wings_of_imagination 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

2 answers

> What is the process called where the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere remains relatively constant at about 0.4% as a resuly of established equilibrium?

Homeostasis? Equilibrium?

> What is the most important result from the process of cellular respiration?

The aerobic organism doesn't die. (Energy is captured from glucose, to make ATP; ATP is used to power other reactions within the cell).

> An increase in the concentration of ATP in a muscle cell is a direct result of which life function?

Glycolysis, and cellular respiration.

2007-03-04 10:57:40 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Are you looking for the term "steady state"? That might be used for the CO2 level.

For cellular respiration, the most important result might be the production of ATP. Chemical energy of food molecules is released and temporarily stored in the form of ATP so that it is available for use by the cell.

For the third one, I'm guessing electron transport and oxidative phosphorylation, though respiration might be the answer you need.

2007-03-04 10:40:31 · answer #2 · answered by hcbiochem 7 · 0 0

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