ships which carry tanks full of petrol and tanks which leak
wipon full
When there is an abundance of starchy food, the body stores excess glucose as glycogen in the liver and muscles for later use as energy. If these stores are full, excess glucose can be converted into fat for long-term energy storage.
When your body's glycogen stores are full, excess glucose is converted into fat for long-term energy storage. This can lead to weight gain if you consume more calories than you burn. Additionally, your body may become less efficient at storing glycogen, potentially leading to insulin resistance over time.
Excess glucose in the body is stored in the liver and muscles as glycogen. Once these glycogen stores are full, any additional glucose is converted into fat and stored in adipose tissue for long-term energy storage.
Birds have a crop below their beak and on the upper portion of their chest where they store food until it is moved down the track. I have baby parrots that I hand feed and I must make sure that their little crop gets full at eat feeding and gets empty beforeI feed it again from the hand feeding syringe.
glycogen in the liver and muscles. When the body needs energy, stored glycogen can be broken down into glucose to fuel cells. If glycogen stores are full, excess glucose is converted into fat for long-term energy storage.
glycogen
No co2 tanks are sold full.
There is debate as to this answer. It is also hard to answer because glycogen is not stored evenly throughout the body, it is stored in the liver and the muscle tissue. Assuming a person has been eating plenty of food, namely carbs, and the glycogen levels are full most texts report the liver being able to hold 70-100 grams of glycogen and the muscles holding 200-400 grams of glycogen. The more muscles someone has and the more trained they are (athletes, etc) the more glycogen they can hold. If we say an average male is 80 kg and an average male has 350 grams of glycogen, then you have about 4.5 grams of glycogen per kg, but again it is not stored evenly so it is an unusual way of framing the question.
The extra energy in your body is stored as glycogen in your muscles and liver for later use. If your glycogen stores are full, the excess energy is stored as fat in adipose tissue.
tanks