Huh? Do you mean where? If you mean where During photosynthesis, the light reactions convert light energy into high energy carriers, including ATP and NADPH. These go on to power the Calvin cycle, which generates glucose. Energy therefore is stored as ATP/NADPH during the light reactions, and later transferred to generate glucose during the dark/Calvin cycle. If you mean who, I only have one word WHAT
Corn plants store energy (glucose) in their thick stems.
in the leaf
it stores at thing called photosynthesis
Plant cells store energy from the sun. They do this because they need the sunlight to make food and because they cannot create energy on their own.
Vacuole
Corn plants store energy (glucose) in their thick stems.
plant cells perform photosynthesis to store energy from the sun in the form of molecules
plant cells
in the leaf
chemical energy
Most plants store energy in the form of starch. The process of photosynthesis allows plants to convert the sun's energy into glucose, which is then converted into starch. The plant can then break the starch back down whenever energy is needed.
it stores at thing called photosynthesis
Plant cells store energy from the sun. They do this because they need the sunlight to make food and because they cannot create energy on their own.
glucose is the primary source of energy. ATP's cannot store a lot of energy so the plats use glucose (C6H12O6) to store their energy.
Plants store energy from the sun through photosynthesis, a process in which they convert sunlight into chemical energy in the form of glucose. This energy is stored in the form of carbohydrates within the plant's cells for later use in growth and metabolism.
Yes - plants store energy in the form of starch.
Vacuole