Not necessarily but they do make their own food through photosynthesis.
No, it is in an animal cell, us humans have fat cells and so do animals, therefore plants do not.
fat stored in plants are stored in oils
No,plants don't have fat cell
animal
glycogen
In plants, glucose is generally stored as starch.
energy
glucose is stored in fat it is not stored as anything else other than glucose in fat. This is why people are fat because they take in too much glucose and it is not burned off through exercise so instead of the body wasting it, it stores it as fat
It is thought that fat is the macronutrient that is most readily stored as body fat since there are 9 calories per gram of fat as opposed to 4 calories per gram for both carbohydrates and protein.
Plants store fats in their seeds. The plants use this fat for energy or it may end up being stored as starch.
Plants store fats in their seeds. The plants use this fat for energy or it may end up being stored as starch.
glycogen
Then the camel would have to survive on the stored fat in its hump - which is what it is there for - until it'd be able to find some plants to eat.
Yes, stored fat can be used.
In plants, glucose is generally stored as starch.
It is stored as fat.
Sugar and carbohydrates are stored as body fat. This is extra energy that the body doesn't need and so it is stored as fat.
No. Fat is the form in which fat is stored.
as fat... what on earth do you mean? fat is a substance.
The body uses glucose as energy. Excess glucose is stored as fat (in animals) and as starch (in plants).
All Vitamin B- complex vitamins are not fat- soluble nor stored in fat of in your body.