bacteria? No. The chemical storage molecule for energy, in living things, is ATP, adenosine triphosphate.
DNA
Carbohydrate
glycogen.
In the chemical bond
Energy in glucose is released. That energy is stored in ATP
In the chemical bonds that like their bonds.
Carbohydrate
DNA
Storage can happen with stable molecules, and ATP is not a stable molecule. It is the energy "currency"- as some like to refer to it. NADH and FADH are electron carriers. Starch (plants), glycogen (animals) are storage carbohydrates; triglycerides are storage lipids. Proteins and nucleic acids may also be used for energy, but the their catabolites are not good for the animal.
Yes
That would be the ATP
Glycogen/starch
Energy storage.
glycogen.
Chemical energy is stored in the bonds of the atoms making up a molecule.
When atoms join together to form a molecule the chemical energy is stored and result in this formation. Like wise, in the break down of a molecule the chemical energy is given off.
For short-term energy storage, living beings use ATP.