Animal cells use energy primarily for various metabolic processes, including maintaining homeostasis, synthesizing biomolecules, and facilitating cellular functions such as growth, repair, and division. Energy is also essential for transporting substances across cell membranes, powering muscle contractions, and conducting nerve impulses. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is the main energy currency that fuels these activities within the cell.
Cells do not use starch for energy storage. Starch is primarily a storage polysaccharide found in plants and not used for energy storage in animal cells. Instead, animal cells store energy in the form of glycogen.
Animal cells use more energy because unlike plant cells, animal cells can move at any speed and it also runs and walk to retrieve food. This puts more strain on the animal cells than on the plant cell :)
fermentation
Many plant and some animal cells use oil for energy storage .
Animal cells use forms of sugar to make energy using the organelles called mitochondria.
Mitochondrions store power in animal cells for later use. However, plants have chloroplasts to store energy.
they can use energy from gasses which makes it carbohydrates
No they do not, only plants do.
Energy is produced in animal cells by organelles called mitochondria.
Animals get energy from the sun by the chloroplasts in the animals cells. The chloroplasts capture energy from the sun and use it to produce energy to the cell and therefore, the animal.
Animal cells use centrioles to create a spindle f9r mitosis and animal cells just use microfillaments and microtubles. Animal cells use just mitochondria to create energy while plant cells use a combination of mitochondrion and chloroplasts. A third difference is that animal cells don't have a cell wall.
That is to produce to energy. It carry out respiration