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Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
Corn is a vascular plant. Everything is vascular, except liverworts and mosses.
the dry stems of corn plants
The corn that we eat is the seed part of the corn plant. Each little kernel is a fertilized seed, and if left to mature and dry can be planted and will grow a corn plant.
Indians taught pilgrims how to plant corn.
glucose and starch
Corn has more than one macromolecule: Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen and Hydrogen are the major nutrients that make up a corn plant and the macromolecules of that plant.
Corn, or maize, is a C4 plant. A c4 plant relates to a group of plants that feature 4-carbon molecules present after the first product of carbon fixation.
Cornsilk is an herbal remedy made from stigmas, the yellowish thread-like strands found inside the husks of corn. Found on the female flower of corn, they are collected before the plant is pollinated, or afterwards.
Yes There was a huge plant there that processed sugars and starch
Corn. Corn is found in almost everything you eat. Look at the labels of your food cans, or your sweets. Corn starch to actual corn.
Corn is produced by the plant called Zea mays. It is a type of grain plant that is cultivated for its edible seeds, which are commonly known as corn or maize.
No. Corn is a C4 plant.
a corn plant
Corn husks are not "made", they are a product of the maize plant which was not grown on the Great Plains of north America, since no farming was carried out there.
corn is a flowering monocotyledonous plant
a corn plant