They Respire it, when they are not storing it; they also use it in some construction activities, and the odd regulatory function.
starch is the store of sugar in plants wheras glycogen is the store of sugar in animals. So quite simply the answer would be no animal cells do not contain starch but they do have there own form of it.
Animals cells are in animals.
Cells store Extra Sugar as Larger Carbohydrates
Generally all aerobic cells contain sugar to respire
Yes animals have cells. All living things have cells.
yes animals need sugar to survive they are like humans in that way.
there are cells in the animals hair
plant cells have a cell wall, animal cells don'tplant cells have chloroplasts, animals don'tanimal cells have cilia and flagellaplant cells have a central vacuole, animals only have a vacuole
No, there are sugar animal deserts/snacks, but animals themselves can't make the sugar Sugar comes from sugar cane hence the term sugar cane; although bees make honey.
Because all cells are roughly the same size. This means that bigger animals are made of more cells than smaller animals. (If bigger animals had the same number of cells as smaller animals then the cells they were made of would have to be bigger in proportion to those that smaller animals were made of - and they are not)
Yes, animals, as well as plants, have trillions of cells.
Totally, there are definitely cells in plants and animals, but they are very different. In a plant, the cells are in a square shape. In animals, the cells are round. Hope this helps you whoever you are lol!