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Plants DO store existing energy as fat in their seeds. The reason plants store most of their energy as carbohydrates is that it is easily converted (stored, then used, then stored again). The chains of starch are easily broken by hydration reactions. Animals, which must move about and carry their fuel supplies with them, find the low energy-per-gram feature of carbohydrates to be a disadvantage. They put up with the more complicated chemistry of fats to achieve an energy-storage efficiency only slightly less than that of gasoline. Plant just DO store the energy as carbs. During photosynthesis, plants combine CO2 and H2O to form carbohydrates. Even if plants somehow wanted to store the energy as fats, they couldn't! CO2 and H2O alone don't combine to make fats. Plants transform carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air, water (H2O) from the ground, and energy from the sun into oxygen (O2) and carbohydrates (C6H12O6):

6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy = C6H12O6 + 6 O2

2006-10-13 03:01:51 · answer #1 · answered by عبد الله (ドラゴン) 5 · 0 0

usually because of fact vegetation lack the enzymes required to digest fat, lipids are the form of saved potential in seeds , yet in spite of this seeds stay dormant for a reasonably long term, while for a plant digestion of carbs is a lots quicker technique there is a few ingredient abt osmotic tension additionally, yet i'm able to't undergo in ideas precisely what

2016-10-19 07:48:37 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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