WHAT IS RESPIRATION AND ITS TYPES  | Biology | Respiration In Animals

WHAT IS RESPIRATION AND ITS TYPES  | Biology | Respiration In Animals


Learning Objectives for the Lesson on Respiration

By the end of the lesson, students should be able to:

Knowledge Objectives

  1. Define respiration and explain how it differs from breathing.

  2. Identify and describe the two types of respiration: aerobic and anaerobic.

  3. State the word and chemical equations for aerobic and anaerobic respiration.

  4. Explain ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) as the energy molecule produced during respiration.

Understanding Objectives

  1. Differentiate between aerobic and anaerobic respiration based on:

    • oxygen use

    • products formed

    • amount of energy released

    • where they occur in the cell

  2. Explain the importance of respiration to living organisms.

  3. Interpret chemical equations of respiration correctly.

  4. Illustrate or trace where aerobic and anaerobic respiration occur in the cell (mitochondria and cytoplasm).

  5. Appreciate the importance of energy in carrying out daily activities such as movement, growth, and repair.

  6. Develop curiosity about how the body produces and uses energy.


1. Meaning / Definition of Respiration

Respiration is the biological process by which living organisms release energy from food substances (like glucose).
It involves the breakdown of glucose in the presence or absence of oxygen to produce energy (ATP) that the body uses for growth, movement, repair, and other activities.

Key points:

  • Respiration takes place in all living cells.

  • It is not the same as breathing.

  • Breathing is the physical act of inhaling and exhaling air, but respiration is the chemical process inside the cells.

  • The main food substance used is glucose.


2. Types of Respiration

There are two major types:

A. Aerobic Respiration

This is respiration that uses oxygen to break down glucose completely into carbon dioxide and water.

Detailed explanation:

  • Occurs inside the mitochondrion of the cell.

  • Produces large amount of energy (ATP).

  • Common in humans, animals, plants, and most organisms.

Characteristics of aerobic respiration:

  • Requires oxygen

  • Complete breakdown of glucose

  • Produces high energy

  • Produces carbon dioxide and water

  • Takes place continuously in most organisms


B. Anaerobic Respiration

This is respiration that does NOT use oxygen to break down glucose. Instead, glucose is only partly broken down.

Detailed explanation:

  • Occurs in the cytoplasm of the cell.

  • Produces less energy than aerobic respiration.

  • Common in yeast, bacteria and occurs in humans during vigorous exercise.

Types of anaerobic respiration:

  1. In animals (e.g., human muscles):
    Glucose is converted into lactic acid and energy.

  2. In yeast (fermentation):
    Glucose is converted into alcohol (ethanol), carbon dioxide, and energy.

Characteristics of anaerobic respiration:

  • Does not require oxygen

  • Occurs when oxygen is insufficient

  • Produces little energy

  • Leads to lactic acid build-up in muscles (causing cramps)


3. Word and Chemical Equations of Respiration

A. Aerobic Respiration

Word Equation:

Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon dioxide + Water + Energy (ATP)

Chemical Equation:

C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ → 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + Energy (ATP)


B. Anaerobic Respiration in Human Muscle

Word Equation:

Glucose → Lactic acid + Energy

Chemical Formula Summary (simplified):

C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2C₃H₆O₃ + Energy


C. Anaerobic Respiration in Yeast (Fermentation)

Word Equation:

Glucose → Alcohol (Ethanol) + Carbon dioxide + Energy

Chemical Formula Summary (simplified):

C₆H₁₂O₆ → 2C₂H₅OH + 2CO₂ + Energy


4. Energy Production (ATP)

ATP stands for Adenosine Triphosphate.
It is the energy-carrying molecule produced during respiration.

How ATP Works

  • Think of ATP as the “energy currency” of the cell.

  • Whenever the body needs energy (to move, grow, repair cells, send nerve impulses, etc.), ATP releases energy by breaking one phosphate bond.

  • Aerobic respiration produces about 36–38 ATP molecules from one glucose molecule.

  • Anaerobic respiration produces only 2 ATP molecules.

Why ATP Is Important

  • Drives all cellular activities

  • Enables muscles to contract

  • Helps nerve cells send signals

  • Supports growth and development

  • Helps maintain body temperature


Summary

  • Respiration is the process by which cells release energy from food.

  • Aerobic processes use oxygen and produce more energy.

  • Anaerobic does not use oxygen and produces less energy.

  • Equations help to show how glucose is broken down.

  • ATP is the main form of energy produced during respiration.

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