No, there are sugar animal deserts/snacks, but animals themselves can't make the sugar
Sugar comes from sugar cane hence the term sugar cane; although bees make honey.
Animals do not have chloroplasts, the organelle responsible for photosynthesis and sugar production in plants. Therefore, animals cannot produce sugar like plants do. Instead, animals obtain sugar by consuming plants or other organisms.
they cant because they dont have money
Yeast are tiny microscopic animals. Yes, ANIMALS. When you put sugar in bread, yeast eat the sugar and release Carbon Dioxide, causing the gas pockets to make the dough rise.
because animals don't have to make the own sugar and energy. plant have to it the only way they can survive. animals eat there food instead of make in themselves
Marshmallows are bad for animals because it can get stuck in their teeth, rot their teeth and the sugar can make them hyper.
yes animals need sugar to survive they are like humans in that way.
Animals need to make energy in order for their muscles to work. Plants simply stay in one place and only need to make sugar from sunlight.
The sugar is converted and stored as fat.
For plant-eating animals the benefit is that they can get to the sugar the plant has stored.
If you are talking about plants, then yes. Water is consumed in photosynthesis to make sugar. If you are talking about animals, then no. Animals make water out of the food they eat and the oxygen they breath.
Plants capture energy from sunlight by means of photosynthesis. Using the green pigment in their leaves called chlorophyll, which makes sugar. They store the sugar primarily as starch. Storage in the form of fat / oil is common too, especially in seeds. Animals mostly store excess sugar in body fat, and plants usually make fruit with excess sugar (as long as they have enough water).
Not really, sugar is made by plants - animals eat the plants to get this sugar.