It comes from the stem
Another name for a sugar plant is sugarcane.
Sugarcane is a grass, so there's no reason why they wouldn't. Humans only use the stem part of the sugarcane plant, so the leaves of this tall grass would be fed to cattle as a sugarcane by-product, as well as what's left over of the stems.
The sugar in sugarcane is primarily found in the juice extracted from the stalk of the plant. This juice is then processed and refined to produce the sugar that we use in various food products.
Sugar is derived from Sugarcane which is a plant.
When you eat sugarcane, you are consuming the stalk, which is the main stem of the plant. The stalk contains high concentrations of sucrose, making it sweet and fibrous. People typically chew the stalk to extract the juice and then discard the fibrous remnants.
Yes, sugarcane is a flowering plant. It belongs to the grass family (Poaceae) and produces tiny flowers in inflorescences at the tip of the stems.
Farmers grow sugarcane because it is the plant from which the bulk of refined sugar is made.
Sugarcane plant under optimum condition can produce seeds also, as it happens in penninsular India (Coimbatore). Since sugarcane propagates by stem cuttings, role of seed formation is limited for plant improvement by hybridization only.
An ovary is the part of the plant an apple comes from.
Yes, aphids can live on sugarcane. These small sap-sucking insects feed on the plant's phloem, which can weaken the plant and lead to reduced growth and yield. Aphids may also transmit plant viruses, further harming sugarcane crops. Effective pest management is important to control aphid populations on sugarcane.
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