chitin
Animals with a skeletal structure.
Adaptation
Glycogen, this is a highly branched form of glucose, this is good because it can be broken down quickly ready for use by cells
A fence.
Animals give us companionship, food, and clothing.
In animals, they are primarily energy storage molecules, although there are a lot of polysaccharide chains that do many extremely important jobs on the membranes of body cells. In plants, they are not only very important food storage molecules (starch), they also serve as structural materials (cellulose) and components in wood.
The most important feature used to classify animals is Body structure!
the kind of polysaccharides that are found in animals are proteins and carbohydrates.
my answer is always correct :) its glycogen and for Plato users the answer is A
A. Glycogen just answered it on plato lol.
glycogen
No. While it is a polysaccharide, just like many of those used to store chemical energy within living organisms (such as the case with starch and glycogen), chitin is primarily used for structure and for strengthening structure within living organisms.
yes ,Glycogen is a polysaccharide. It is a major storage form of carbohydrate in animal.found mainly in liver and muscle.It is a highly branched form of amylopectin .Alfa-1,6 branching point is occur every eight to ten D- glucose residues.
cellulose
Carbohydrate polymers are polysaccharides. Plants store energy in the polysaccharide known as starch (amylose and amylopectin). Animals store energy in the polysaccharide glycogen. Plants form the polysaccharide cellulose for structural components (such as their cell walls). Insects and crustaceans form the polysaccharide chitin for structural components (such as their exoskeletons).
Yes the polysaccharides in animals is called glycogen. This polysaccharide is found in the liver and muscles.
Animals store carbohydrates as glycogen. Glycogen is a multibranched polysaccharide of glucose.