plants "pipes" that transports sugar molecules are called phloem
Passive transport does not require sugar. Passive transport is a process by which molecules move across a cell membrane without the input of energy, such as diffusion or osmosis. Sugar molecules can be transported passively, but the process itself does not depend on sugar.
transport proteins both are carrier proteins and channel proteins
Glucose is stored in starch molecules.
Plants store sugar mainly in the form of starch, which is a long chain of glucose molecules. They produce sugar during photosynthesis in their leaves and then transport it to other parts of the plant, like roots and stems, where it can be stored. This stored starch can be broken down into sugar later when the plant needs energy to grow or survive. It's like saving energy for a rainy day!
Carbon dioxide and water
stem
Passive transport does not require sugar. Passive transport is a process by which molecules move across a cell membrane without the input of energy, such as diffusion or osmosis. Sugar molecules can be transported passively, but the process itself does not depend on sugar.
Phloem transport sugars, Xylem transports water
The process by which molecules of sugar pass through an animal cell membrane is called facilitated diffusion. In this process, sugar molecules move across the cell membrane with the help of specific transport proteins. These transport proteins create channels for the sugar molecules to pass through, allowing them to replenish the cell's supply of sugar.
transport proteins both are carrier proteins and channel proteins
Glucose is stored in starch molecules.
Sugar molecules.
Plants store sugar mainly in the form of starch, which is a long chain of glucose molecules. They produce sugar during photosynthesis in their leaves and then transport it to other parts of the plant, like roots and stems, where it can be stored. This stored starch can be broken down into sugar later when the plant needs energy to grow or survive. It's like saving energy for a rainy day!
Starch provides long-term energy storage for plants. The energy for plants is stored in the sugar molecules. Starch can contain 500 to a few hundred thousand sugar molecules.
Plant sugar is "sucrose", made up of the simpler sugar molecules "glucose" and "fructose" (both produced by photosynthesis).
Active transport can transport both sugar and amino acids across the cell membrane. This process requires energy in the form of ATP to move these molecules against their concentration gradient.
Carbon dioxide and water