Not sure...but I want to say yes...
Resting skeletal muscles burn glucose for energy. Although fat can also be used as an energy source, if glucose is present, muscles will use glucose first.
muscles use chemical energy in glucose , as the bonds in glucose break, chemical energy changes to mechanical energy and the muscle contracts.. well there you go that how you produce mechanical energy :)
When we're active we're using more of our muscles including our skeletal, heart and breathing muscles. All of this muscular contraction takes energy in the form of ATP which we get by breaking down glucose.
Plants use light energy to make glucose.
Glucose is a supplier of energy to the cells. Cells use the glucose as well as fats for fuel.
Glucose is the energy source for the body. But it cannot use it in that form, so it converts it to ATP for use in metabolism.
Energy is stored as fat in the muscles.
Plants store energy in the form of Glucose
Glucose can be stored in plants in several ways. In some plants , the glucose molecules join to one another to form starch molecules. Some plants convert glucose to fructose and the energy is stored in this form. In other plants, fructose combines with glucose to form sucrose. The energy is stored in carbohydrates in this form. Plant cells obtain energy for their activities from these molecules.
glucose
Lactic acid is produced in muscles due to a lack of oxygen in the cells. There is also an increased level carbon dioxide in the cell. These two factors cause the cell to use lactic acid fermentation as a temporary energy source.
glucose and for a short energy burst kinetic energy, stored in muscle masses