Trees and anything made of wood.
Cell wall
The most outermost structure in a plant cell is the cell wall. The cell wall provides support and protection to the cell, and it is composed of cellulose, a rigid carbohydrate material.
The answer is cellulose. Cellulose is a long-chain polymeric polysaccharide carbohydrate, of beta-glucose . It forms the primary structural component of green plants. The primary cell wall of green plants is made primarily of cellulose; the secondary wall contains cellulose with variable amounts of lignin. Lignin and cellulose, considered together, are termed lignocellulose, which (as wood) is argued to be one of the most common biopolymers on Earth (chrysolaminarin is often argued to be the other). Only one group of animals, the tunicates, has the ability to create and use cellulose. Some acetic acid bacteria are also known to synthesize cellulose
Cellulose is a polysaccharide in plants that serves as a building material.
cellulose
Cell walls are composed of cellulose.
Cell wall
Cellulose.
cellulose
The animal cell doesn't have a cell wall, just a cell membrane. However, plant cells have cell walls, and those are made of a rigid layer of nonliving material, cellulose.
cellulose. cellulose is not the material in ALL cell walls, just plant cells. It's chitin in fungi and peptidoglycan in bacteria.
hearne texas
The most outermost structure in a plant cell is the cell wall. The cell wall provides support and protection to the cell, and it is composed of cellulose, a rigid carbohydrate material.
The main sugar found in plant material is cellulose. Cellulose is composed of chains of linked glucose molecules.
The cell wall which is composed of cellulose
Plasma Membrane :D
Splints made of wood do contain cellulose. Cellulose is the main building block of plant material. Cellulose provides structure and strength to plant cell walls.