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NotesBiology HLTopic 3.2Aerobic vs anaerobic respiration
Back to Biology HL Topics
3.2.33 min read

Aerobic vs anaerobic respiration

IB Biology • Unit 3

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Contents

  • Two ways to release energy from glucose
  • Comparing the two — feature by feature
  • Exam-style question
The big idea: Cells release energy from glucose to make ATP. They can do this in two ways.

Aerobic respiration uses oxygen, breaks glucose down fully, and releases a lot of ATP.

Anaerobic respiration uses no oxygen, breaks glucose down only partly, and releases only a little ATP.

Which one a cell uses depends mainly on whether oxygen is available.

Glucose branches two ways: with oxygen → carbon dioxide + water + a lot of ATP (in the mitochondria); without oxygen → lactate in animals, or ethanol + carbon dioxide in yeast, with only a little ATP (in the cytoplasm).

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Cell respiration
The release of energy from glucose (or other carbon compounds) to make ATP, which powers the cell's processes.
Aerobic respiration
Respiration that uses oxygen. Glucose is broken down fully into carbon dioxide and water, releasing a lot of ATP.
Anaerobic respiration
Respiration that takes place without oxygen. Glucose is broken down only partly, releasing only a little ATP.
ATP
The cell's usable energy currency — the molecule respiration makes to power work in the cell.
Lactate
The product of anaerobic respiration in animals, including human muscle cells.
Ethanol
A product of anaerobic respiration in yeast (along with carbon dioxide); the basis of bioethanol fuel and brewing.
What the names tell you: Aerobic = with air (oxygen). An-aerobic = without air (no oxygen) — the 'an-' means 'without'.

So the single difference the names point to is simply: is oxygen used, or not?

The two types of respiration differ in five things you should be able to compare: oxygen use, where in the cell it happens, how fully glucose is broken down, the ATP yield, and the products.

Work through them one at a time — the cause of every difference traces back to the same thing: whether oxygen is there to finish the job.

Why aerobic releases so much more ATP: With oxygen, glucose is broken down all the way to carbon dioxide and water, so almost all of its stored energy is released — a lot of ATP.

Without oxygen, glucose is only partly broken down (into lactate, or ethanol + CO₂), so most of its energy is still locked inside that product — only a little ATP comes out.

Cause → effect: no oxygen → incomplete breakdown → far less ATP.
The products depend on the organism: Anaerobic respiration makes different products in different organisms:

In animals (including human muscle), the product is lactate.

In yeast (and plant cells), the products are ethanol + carbon dioxide — this is how bread, alcohol and bioethanol fuel are made.

Aerobic respiration, by contrast, gives the same products in all of them: carbon dioxide + water.
FeatureAerobic respirationAnaerobic respiration
Oxygen needed?Yes — uses oxygenNo — oxygen is absent
Where in the cellMitochondria (after the cytoplasm)Cytoplasm only
How fully glucose is broken downFully broken downOnly partly broken down
ATP yield per glucoseA lot of ATPOnly a little ATP
Products in animals (incl. humans)Carbon dioxide + waterLactate
Products in yeast (and plants)Carbon dioxide + waterEthanol + carbon dioxide

Aerobic

  • Uses oxygen
  • Happens in the mitochondria
  • Glucose broken down fully
  • Releases a lot of ATP
  • Products: carbon dioxide + water

Anaerobic

  • Uses no oxygen
  • Happens in the cytoplasm
  • Glucose broken down only partly
  • Releases only a little ATP
  • Products: lactate (animals) / ethanol + CO₂ (yeast)
A memory hook: Oxygen = more ATP. With oxygen the cell finishes the job and gets a big energy payout; without oxygen it stops early and gets a small one.

And for the products: Animals make lactate; yeast makes ethanol (think 'yeast → used in brewing').

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How this is tested: On Paper 1A a one-mark question often asks for the product and location of anaerobic respiration in human cells — the answer is lactate, made in the cytoplasm.

Another favourite is the contrast itself: state the waste products of aerobic versus anaerobic respiration, or identify what distinguishes the two (aerobic uses oxygen and yields far more ATP).

Look out for the applied versions too: how a muscle cell responds during intense exercise (oxygen runs low → anaerobic → lactate), and how bioethanol is made (yeast respiring anaerobically → ethanol + CO₂).

IB-style question — compare oxygen use, products and ATP yield

Compare aerobic and anaerobic respiration in human cells, referring to the use of oxygen, the products formed, and the amount of ATP released. [4]

How to score all four marks

  1. Oxygen. Aerobic respiration uses oxygen, whereas anaerobic respiration takes place without oxygen.
  2. Products in human cells. Aerobic respiration produces carbon dioxide and water, whereas anaerobic respiration produces lactate.
  3. ATP yield. Aerobic respiration releases a lot of ATP per glucose, whereas anaerobic respiration releases only a little.
  4. Why. This is because with oxygen the glucose is fully broken down, releasing most of its energy. (Award 1 mark per correct contrasted point, up to 4.)

Final answer

Aerobic uses oxygen, makes carbon dioxide + water and releases a lot of ATP; anaerobic uses no oxygen, makes lactate and releases only a little ATP — because without oxygen glucose is only partly broken down.

✓ Why this scores full marks: A 'compare' answer needs each point set against its opposite — aerobic does X whereas anaerobic does Y.

Simply listing facts about one type (for example, only describing aerobic) loses the comparison marks even if every fact is true.
OrganismWith oxygen (aerobic)Without oxygen (anaerobic)
Human / animal musclecarbon dioxide + waterlactate
Yeast (and plant cells)carbon dioxide + waterethanol + carbon dioxide

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the product, and the location in the cell, of anaerobic respiration in human muscle cells. [2 marks]

Related Biology HL Topics

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3.1.1Metabolism: anabolism and catabolism
3.1.2Active sites, specificity and induced fit
3.1.3Activation energy and energy profiles
3.1.4Temperature, pH and substrate concentration
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