fuel for cellular respiration and a starting material for making other organic molecules
Yes, part of these sugars is used up by plants during respiration.
yes
Plants use sugars produced during photosynthesis to make organic compounds. Photosynthesis is a plants method of making food for itself.
Plants use light as their source of energy to make carbohydrates such as sugars.
Photosynthesis produces sugars, but these sugars must be broken down. Otherwise, the plant cannot use the energy stored in sugars.
Plants use carbon dioxide, light, and water to produce (photosynthesise) "food" in the form of simple sugars - basically glucose. These sugars are normally stored as starch and are a form or chemical energy
In their stem and leaves only
Photosynthesis is the process by which plants use light energy to make sugars.
Plants harness the energy from our sun to create chlorophyll from the process of photosynthesis. Plants use the energy of sunlight to synthesize the hexose sugars by photosynthesis in their chloroplasts.
the plant dies
They need it as energy for their bodies. They take sunlight and oxygen to do photosynthesis, and then get ATP, (energy in a form that plants can use) to live, and flourish. Without it, they'd die.
Plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere during photosynthesis to form sugars and oxygen. This process is essential for the growth and survival of plants.