No, corn plants do not need supports that are commonly found on plants like beans or tomatoes. Corn plants have a sturdy stalk and tend to do well when separated from neighboring plants by at least one foot.
The soybean plants add materials to soil that the corn plants need in order to grow well
Corn is a plant.
Corn plants does have glucose. Most of it comes from the leaves.
Lignin, a spiral shaped chemical, supports the structure of plants.
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Antarctica, because corn (like all plants) need sunlight to survive and it is too cold all year long.
All corn plants are corn, but the various "varieties" and hybrids have widely different characteristics, both of the plants and of the corn produced. The largest cultivars for human consumption are hybrids (sweet corn) rather than the field corn which is native to North America.
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On pop corn plants.
No......
No, corn requires sunlight to survive, much like most plants.
The circumstantial evidence that supports that hypothesis that high fructose corn syrup is harmful to humans is the fact that obesity is so high. The instances of diabetes is another piece of circumstantial evidence that supports this.