Question
Which steps in Figure 36-5 show carbon passing through the biosphere?
Hint: Human activity = car exhaust and chimney/factory emissions
(1 point)
Responses
Cellular Respiration, fossil fuels, feeding and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, fossil fuels, feeding and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, volcanic activity and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, volcanic activity and decomposition
Photosynthesis, feeding, cellular respiration & volcanic activity
Hint: Human activity = car exhaust and chimney/factory emissions
(1 point)
Responses
Cellular Respiration, fossil fuels, feeding and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, fossil fuels, feeding and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, volcanic activity and decomposition
Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, volcanic activity and decomposition
Photosynthesis, feeding, cellular respiration & volcanic activity
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response showing carbon passing through the biosphere is:
**Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition**
This process outlines the movement of carbon through different components of the biosphere, highlighting key processes such as photosynthesis (where plants take in carbon dioxide), feeding (where carbon is transferred through food chains), cellular respiration (where organisms release carbon dioxide), and decomposition (where dead organic matter is broken down, releasing carbon back into the environment).
**Cellular Respiration, photosynthesis, feeding, and decomposition**
This process outlines the movement of carbon through different components of the biosphere, highlighting key processes such as photosynthesis (where plants take in carbon dioxide), feeding (where carbon is transferred through food chains), cellular respiration (where organisms release carbon dioxide), and decomposition (where dead organic matter is broken down, releasing carbon back into the environment).