Cellulose is the sugar in plants that makes up their cell walls. It is impermeable to water and protects the plant's cell organelles form damage.
Yes, cellulose is a polysaccharide that provides structural support in plant cell walls. It is not used directly for energy storage, but plants break down cellulose into glucose molecules, which can then be used for energy through cellular respiration.
Cellulose is used as a structural protein in a 'plant'.
Cellulose is a plant sugar complexed to be used as structural support. It is not found in meat.
Yes it is.
Cellulose
Yes, cellulose is present in the cell wall of a plant.
no, cellulose is not a plant at all
Cellulose is the main structural material used in the cell walls of plants. It is a complex carbohydrate polymer made of repeating units of glucose molecules. Cellulose provides strength and rigidity to plant cell walls, allowing them to maintain their shape and structure.
A cellulose sponge is made of, well, cellulose. Cellulose is the main component of plant cell walls, so many plant derived products are cellulose based. Wood is about 50% cellulose, paper and cardboard are almost entirely cellulose, and most plant fibers are mostly cellulose- cotton is about 90% cellulose. the wikipedia article is decent: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellulose
Cellulose is the substance that makes up most of a plant cell's walls
Cellulose is the substance that makes up most of a plant cell's walls
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