Question detail
Which option best explains anaerobic respiration within Respiration?
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Respiration
Question
- A. Represent anaerobic respiration in plant and yeast cells using the word equation glucose makes ethanol plus carbon dioxide.
- B. Students often incorrectly represent the products of anaerobic respiration in yeast cells, stating that glucose produces only ethanol or only carbon dioxide.
- C. It is not correct that represent anaerobic respiration in plant and yeast cells using the word equation glucose makes ethanol plus carbon dioxide.
- D. The idea only requires memorising the topic title for Respiration.
Answer
In this question, Represent anaerobic respiration in plant and yeast cells using the word equation glucose makes ethanol plus carbon dioxide. is correct It stays aligned to the exact wording and meaning of the objective.
Explanation
In AQA-style practice, the correct answer must match the objective closely and use the science rather than filler wording. That is why Represent anaerobic respiration in plant and yeast cells using the word equation glucose makes ethanol plus carbon dioxide. is the best option here. Linking the idea to a type of respiration that occurs without oxygen, resulting in the production of ethanol and carbon dioxide in yeast and plants keeps the explanation specific.
Common mistake
Common Mistake in Representing Anaerobic Respiration
Students often incorrectly represent the products of anaerobic respiration in yeast cells, stating that glucose produces only ethanol or only carbon dioxide.
Remind students that the correct representation includes both ethanol and carbon dioxide as products of anaerobic respiration in yeast, using the word equation: glucose makes ethanol plus carbon dioxide.
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