Cellulose is the found in plant cell walls, it is needed to strenghten these (it forms microfirbils).
Starch is the energy store in plants, so used in respiration
Thanks
The Plant Doctor
Starch
No. Cellulose and starch are both forms of carbohydrates, not a form of one another.
they're phospholipids silly...
2 polysaccharides found in plants are starch and cellulose. :)
Cellulose and starch are both polysaccharides made up of glucose molecules, but they differ in their structure and function. Cellulose is a structural component in plant cell walls, providing rigidity and support, while starch is a storage form of glucose in plants, serving as an energy reserve. Both are important carbohydrates in the diet and provide benefits to human health.
Cellulose can be separated from a mixture of glucose, starch, and cellulose through a process called filtration. Cellulose is insoluble in water, while glucose and starch are soluble. By mixing the mixture with water and filtering it, the cellulose will be left behind on the filter paper, while the glucose and starch pass through as a solution.
The monomer that makes up glycogen starch and cellulose is the monasaccharide?
Two polymers made by plants are cellulose and starch. Cellulose is a structural polymer that provides strength and rigidity to plant cell walls, while starch is a storage polymer that serves as a source of energy for plants.
Starch-you use an enzyme e.g. amylase to convert the starch to sugar ,add an enzyme which breaks the starch or cellulose into sugars. The yeast will then ferment the sugars. Not sure about cellulose...
The monomer unit of polysacharides such as starch and cellulose is glucose.
Cellulose; starch; chitin
Starch and cellulose.