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Glycogen, Cellulose, and Starch are all examples of Polysaccharides.
Starch Cellulose, Glycogen and Chitin Polysaccharides and for the monomer is sugar
STARCH in plants. GLYCOGEN in animals.
They're called polysaccharides and they exhibit a great diversity of form and composition. Examples include amylopectin and amylose found as starch in plants and glycogen found in animals all used for secondary energy storage. Together with cellulose, which is also a polysaccharide, these are the most common polysaccharides but there are many others.
This compound is starch.
Glycogen, Cellulose, and Starch are all examples of Polysaccharides.
starch cellulose glycogen
Starch, glycogen, cellulose
Polysaccharides are long chains of monosaccharides linked by glycosidic bonds. Three important polysaccharides, starch, glycogen, and cellulose, are composed ofglucose. Starch and glycogen serve as short-term energy stores in plants and animals, respectively. They range in structure from linear to highly branched.
cellulose
Starch Cellulose, Glycogen and Chitin Polysaccharides and for the monomer is sugar
No. All of these are carbohydrates and specifically polsaccharides. Starch and glycogen are storage polysaccharides. Cellulose and chitin are structural polysaccharides.
Glycogen, starch, Cellulose and chitin
Polysaccharides such as: starch, glycogen and cellulose
Examples: starch, cellulose, glycogen.
They are all polysaccharides.
The monomer that makes up glycogen starch and cellulose is the monasaccharide?