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I think it has cellulose as it is a plant and all plants have cellulose Yes, insectivorous plants have cellulose. Most of them are highly developed vascular plants. These plants meet part of their nitrogen requirement from insects.
cellulose
Cellulose is made in animals, starch is made in plants from polysaccarides
amylose and amylopectin
Primarily cellulose, which unlike animal cells, use cellulose for their cell walls instead of phospholipids. Most animals lack the ability to digest cellulose, except for ruminants like cows, which have an enzyme called cellulase to break this down.
Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis would come to a halt, glucose would no longer be produced.
I think it has cellulose as it is a plant and all plants have cellulose Yes, insectivorous plants have cellulose. Most of them are highly developed vascular plants. These plants meet part of their nitrogen requirement from insects.
cellulose
plants use cellulose as a way to keep the stem sturdy
We get fiber in our diets from the cellulose (cell walls) in plants.
There are several things that can break down cellulose. Most are anaerobic bacteria like cellulomonas and are found in the stomachs of cows and sheep.
The ability to produce their own food.
Cellulose is made in animals, starch is made in plants from polysaccarides
No. Cellulose is a substance, not a living thing. Plants evolved from algae that developed cell walls made of cellulose.
Plants
amylose and amylopectin