The sugar beet and the sugar cane.Flowers don't count.
No
Photosynthetic plants are plants that use photosynthesis, or the process of turning sunlight into sugar, for engergy.
Carbon dioxide is biologically recycled. Plants make sugar with it, by means of photosynthesis, and then animals may eat that plant or the part of the plant that contains the sugar, and they metabolize the sugar and produce carbon dioxide as a waste product, which gets exhaled into the air. Plants can then absorb that same carbon dioxide molecule from the air, and use it to make sugar again. There is no limit to the number of times that this can be repeated.
Powdered sugar is made by grinding sugar very finely.
Tissue
Cells of the same kind make a tissue.
No
No, sucrose and aspartame are not the same. Sucrose is a natural sugar found in plants like sugar cane and sugar beets, while aspartame is an artificial sweetener made up of amino acids.
Gazelle
Photosynthetic plants are plants that use photosynthesis, or the process of turning sunlight into sugar, for engergy.
Plants produce sugar through photosynthesis, a process where they use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose. This glucose is used as their main energy source for growth and development.
Change in habitat results in many varities of the same kind.
Respiration in plants is the same as in other eukaryotes (such as animals), however photosynthesising cells do not need to respire (i.e. use sugar to produce ATP) because photosynthesis already provides ATP. Therefore leaves only require respiration when there is no light.
The common and accepted granulate taste is the same, only the texture has been altered. All sugar in most countries today are the same.. Powdered sugar or confectioners sugar are further refining steps. Sugar begins as some kind of dark or brown sugar. The refining process alters it.
Yes. In fact, sugar (the kind you put on strawberries) and sucrose are the same thing!
they would all look the same
No. Powdered sugar is sucrose. Out bodies can break it down to make glucose.