Yes
cellulose-rich, protein-poor fodder. Low nutritive grasses and sedges.
cellulose is a polymer. it a chain of repeating monomers. the monomer for cellulose is glucose. cellulose is a polymer. it a chain of repeating monomers. the monomer for cellulose is glucose.
cellulose is the strong substance that makes up cell walls.
The cellulose molecules
cellulose
Termites eat cellulose. Wood is made of cellulose so termites eat wood.
People cannot digest cellulose
People cannot digest cellulose
People cannot digest cellulose
People cannot digest cellulose
Paper is made of cellulose and humans cannot digest cellulose. Cellulose is another name for wood fiber.
People cannot digest cellulose
people cannot digest cellulose but cows can
people cannot digest cellulose but cows can
People cannot digest cellulose
No ---------------------------------------------------------- I am no entomological expert, but I can say with some confidence that no such species exists. Termites eat through wood because it is high in cellulose, in fact they will eat almost anything high in cellulose (one of the few animal species that can process raw cellulose). The termites themselves do not process the cellulose, though. They have symbiont protozoans in their hindgut that do this for them, so they survive through a symbiotic relationship with these gut protozoans. As a species, termites are defined by this dependence on cellulose. So, if an insect species was found to eat steel, it would most likely not be classified as a termite. Steel does not contain cellulose.
They are also called the "wood louse". They eat cellulose (dead plant matter).