the tongue absorbs all the sugar in the mouth
The obvious answer would be the stomach, Considering however that its just not one part of the body that digests food I'l say that digestion first starts in the mouth.
The " mouth" of the Venus fly trap is covered in a very sticky sugar substance. Flies love sugar. When a fly lands on the sugar in the Venus fly traps' mouth, it gets stuck. Then the Venus fly trap closes it's mouth and digests the fly.
Food doesn't digeset in your mouth. It digests in your stomache. Food doesn't digeset in your mouth. It digests in your stomache.
A gullet opening is the opening of the second part of a frogs mouth. This is where this second opening begins.
It's an enzyme that digests long sugar chains (bread, pasta, etc) into more simple sugar units such as glucose, maltose, galactose. This is not the only place were sugars are broken down, amylase is also present in small intestine.
no, because you saliva digests allot of the sugar in it
Starts carbohydrate digestion
The enzyme that digests starch is called amylase. Amylase is produced in both the saliva (salivary amylase) and the pancreas (pancreatic amylase) and breaks down starch into smaller sugar molecules like maltose.
The process by which the human body digests starch is called enzymatic digestion. It begins in the mouth, where the enzyme amylase breaks down starch into smaller sugar molecules. This process continues in the small intestine, where other enzymes further break down the sugars into glucose for absorption into the bloodstream.
it eats it through its mouth and poops it out its butt. easy.
no. The stomach digests them and the sperm dies
Sucrase is the enzyme (called a disaccharidase) that digests sucrose, the major disaccharide in table sugar.