Polysaccharides
a unit of sugar in carbihydrates is called monosaccharides. units of sugar (polymers) is called polysaccharides.
Examples of glucans include cellulose, starch, and glycogen. These are polysaccharides made of glucose units linked together in different ways, providing structural support (cellulose), energy storage (starch and glycogen), or a combination of both.
No. All of these are carbohydrates and specifically polsaccharides. Starch and glycogen are storage polysaccharides. Cellulose and chitin are structural polysaccharides.
A long string of glucose molecules is called a polysaccharide. Examples of polysaccharides include starch, glycogen, and cellulose.
If by 2 polysaccharides you mean any two, then some of the common examples would be cellulose, peptidoglycan, starch (amylose and amylopectin), hemicellulose, chitin, glycogen ........... the list is almost endless.
It is called macromolecule, such as proteins, DNA and cellulose.
A polysaccharide is a type of sugar composed of a long chain of monosaccharides. Examples are cellulose, starch, glycogen, and chitin.
Carbohydrates.
Better for what?
no, but starch and cellulose are.
Two examples of carbohydrates in living organisms are glucose and cellulose. Glucose is a simple sugar that serves as an important energy source, while cellulose is a complex carbohydrate found in plant cell walls providing structural support.
They polymerize the sugar into either cellulose and/or starch.
Examples: starch, cellulose, glycogen.
Glucose, starch, and cellulose
Examples: starch, cellulose, glycogen.
I d
The scientific name for complex carbohydrates is polysaccharides. These are large molecules composed of multiple sugar units bonded together. Examples include starch, glycogen, and cellulose.