No. stomach does not store the food. It digest the proteins to some extent.
Cells and carbohydrates are the two nutrients which store energy.
the mitochondria is like a stomach that gives out energy and the vacuoles store water and nutrients and i think waste (biggest in plants)
Carbohydrates and Lipids!
Cells don't store energy. They make it as they need it.
Cells don't store energy. They make it as they need it.
No, they do not. The popular belief that camels store water in their humps is a myth and zoological hoax. Camels actually store fat in their humps. Excessive nutrients that the camel does not currently need are converted into fat and stored in the humps. These nutrients come from plants, seeds and water. 1,000g of fat in the camels hump can yield the equivalent to 1,111g of water when metabolised. In summary, camels do not physically store water in their humps. They store fatty tissue containing nutrients which is metabolised when the camel needs those nutrients.
People store nutrients primarily through the body's metabolic processes. Carbohydrates are stored as glycogen in the liver and muscles, while excess fats are stored in adipose tissue. Proteins are not stored in the same way; instead, amino acids are used for immediate energy or to build and repair tissues. The body regulates these stores based on dietary intake and energy needs.
The stomach does not store food for a prolonged period. It temporarily holds food for digestion and gradually releases it into the small intestine for further processing and absorption of nutrients.
The food vacuole in protists, including Stentor, is analogous to the stomach in higher organisms. It functions to ingest, digest, and store food particles within the cell. The food vacuole helps provide nutrients and energy for the protist's survival and growth.
your brain
caamel is a remunant so he store its food in his compound stomach....
Fats store energy for the body and other nutrients such as Vitamin A and D.