Plants usually store food in their fruits and seeds such as many crop plants like wheat, pea, pegion pea etc; in the stem tubers like potato or in roots like sweet potato. Whether they store their food in roots or fruits depends on the plant.
The plant cell has a vacoule to store water, food, and waste
Spinach stores its plant food in its dark green leaves through the process of photosynthesis. This plant food, in the form of carbohydrates, provides energy for the spinach to grow and thrive.
Plants store the food in the form of starch, glucose and cellulose ...
The tomato plant stores food in its storage tissue allover the plant body and to allure animals and birds for its seed dispersal the ripe berries of this plant have seeds embedded in the pulp. This fruit pulp has no direct use as food by the plant. The new plants germinating from the seeds utilize the food reserves in the cotyledons of the seed.
Tubers and rhizomes are both types of plant stems that store nutrients, but they have different structures and functions. Tubers are swollen, underground stems that store food for the plant, such as potatoes. Rhizomes are underground stems that grow horizontally and produce roots and shoots, allowing the plant to spread. Overall, tubers store food for the plant, while rhizomes help the plant spread and reproduce.
Dahlia store food in their tubers.
seed
Seeds store it in the endosperm.
embryo
Cabbage
Starch is food that plants is stored
plant cells store food in the plant and animals look for food to eat
to store food in the plant
yes, it does
Source and sink
Well, it depends on what plant it is... But it is usually it's roots.
The roots on the plants are swollen or thick