No !
Plants
Cellulose is made in animals, starch is made in plants from polysaccarides
2 polysaccharides found in plants are starch and cellulose. :)
Cotton, cardboard and paper contains mostly cellulose. These items are produced from plants. For example, cotton is about 90 percent cellulose.
The cell walls of plants are made of cellulose. Approximately 33 percent of all plant material is cellulose. Humans cannot digest cellulose, but animals such as cows and horses can digest cellulose for food.
cellulose
mitochondria, chloroplasts, cellulose cell wall
There are several things that can break down cellulose. Most are anaerobic bacteria like cellulomonas and are found in the stomachs of cows and sheep.
Animals, even humans, get glucose from plants that are eaten. Carnivorous animals get glucose from other animals that are eaten. All plants use cellulose for mostly structural purposes, but cellulose is 100% glucose. Fruits are a fine source of fructose, another type of sugar molecule.
No. Fungi are their own kingdom of organisms separate from plants and animals. Insects are animals.
polyvinyl chloridepolystyrenenylonPETEABSpolyethylenepolysiloxaneteflonpolyurethaneetc.See link for more.
Cotton is a fibre made of cellulose. It comes from a plant. 'Fat' has to do with animals, not plants.