Plants
I think it has cellulose as it is a plant and all plants have cellulose Yes, insectivorous plants have cellulose. Most of them are highly developed vascular plants. These plants meet part of their nitrogen requirement from insects.
No !
humans, plants, cells, mammals, and insects.
Cotton, cardboard and paper contains mostly cellulose. These items are produced from plants. For example, cotton is about 90 percent cellulose.
Plants are the primary organisms that produce cellulose. Specifically, cellulose is made by plant cells, such as those in the stems, leaves, and roots of plants. Additionally, some bacteria and algae also have the ability to produce cellulose.
No, chitin is not a structural component of plants. Instead, it is a structural component of the exoskeletons of arthropods like insects and crustaceans. Plants have cellulose as their main structural component.
Small mammals/reptiles, insects. If a plant is carnivorous.
Chitin and cellulose are both polysaccharides. Chitin is sturctural form of glucose in insects, the exoskeleton. Cellulose is the structural form of glucose in plants. When you "snap" a piece of plant, the "snap" is the cellulose. Cellulose can not be broken down by the stomache. It gets pushed out through the excretory system. Cellulose is fiber.
It contains animals, such as worms, insects, and small mammals, and plants.
Bears hunt for food such as fish, small mammals, insects, and plants in the wild.
The biodiversity is the large number of plants and animals, including dry plants, water plants, ferns, insects, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
Not animals are only eat plants, but large number of mammals eat plants for instance, human beings, insects, birds,reptiles, micro-amphibians and the other mammals includes herbivours and omnivours.