Cellulose exists in all plant cells. I believe it exists to a certain degree in most prokaryotic and animal cells as well.
Cotton is a fibre made of cellulose. It comes from a plant. 'Fat' has to do with animals, not plants.
I think it has cellulose as it is a plant and all plants have cellulose Yes, insectivorous plants have cellulose. Most of them are highly developed vascular plants. These plants meet part of their nitrogen requirement from insects.
The cell wall of plant cell is made up of cellulose. So green leafy vegetables have got most cellulose in it. Fruits also contains cellulose. Cellulose can not be digested by humans. that gives bulk to your feces.
cellulose
plants use cellulose as a way to keep the stem sturdy
No, scientists believe that plants did not evolve directly from cellulose. Cellulose is a complex carbohydrate that makes up the cell walls of plants. Plants evolved from simpler ancestral organisms that did not have cellulose in their cell walls, but over time, they developed cellulose as a structural component.
Wood is composed mostly of cellulose and lignin, in the form of fibers, and it comes from plants (trees or possibly shrubbery). Those are the defining characteristics of wood.
We get fiber in our diets from the cellulose (cell walls) in plants.
Plants
Two polymers made by plants are cellulose and starch. Cellulose is a structural polymer that provides strength and rigidity to plant cell walls, while starch is a storage polymer that serves as a source of energy for plants.
Mainly cellulose, hemi-cellulose and pectin.
Yes, cellulose forms the cell walls of all plants