Cellulose
No. Starch provides energy for BOTH humans and cows. Starch is not dietary fibre, it is essentially a form of carbohydrates, or "carbs" in more simpler terms.
Cellulose
Cellulose.
Carbohydrate
Herbivores obtain carbon from plants, which are rich in carbon compounds. Carnivores obtain carbon from herbivores.
Although muscles are also composed of fibers, in dietary terms there is no fiber in turkey breast. Only plant fibers count.
Dietary fiber is another kind of complex carbohydrate. Though it does not act as a source of energy for the body it provides many other positive benefits. Fiber is classified by nutritionists as either insoluble fiber or soluble fiber. This is based on whether it dissolves in water. Both insoluble and soluble fibers are incapable of being broken down by the body's digestive enzymes. For this reason, fiber adds no additional calories to your diet and it cannot be converted to glucose.
meat and beans contain proteins mostly. the few carbs in beans are mostly dietary fibers. some beans contain way more carbs than others
Dietary fibers
Insoluble ans soluble fiber
You're wrong, both of these have RDAs.
Apples, carrots and fiber one bars help.
Dietary fiber is from cellulose, only manufactured by plants. Insoluble fibers are also only in plants.
purkinje fibers
Collagen Fibers, made up of fibrous protein, which are bundled together into thick collagen fibers. Collagen fibers are extremely tough and provides high tensile strength (which provides resistant property of tendons) Stress tests have show collagen fibers to be stronger than steel fibers of the same size.....EB