Answer:
You store it: Glycogen
Explanation:
Excess glucose is stored in the liver as the large compound called glycogen. Glycogen is a polysaccharide of glucose, but its structure allows it to pack compactly, so more of it can be stored in cells for later use.
The correct answer would be D, post industrial.
The aerobic system of energy production uses glycogen, but primarily glucose as its energy source.
Glucose is taken in by the cell and broken into pyruvate in the process of glycolysis, the first step in aerobic cell respiration. It takes place in the cell cytoplasm.
Pyruvate is then used in the Krebs cycle in the cell mitochondria in the second step of respiration which produces high energy electron carriers. These high energy electron carries such as NADP are then employed in the electron transport chain, the last step of the respiration process, where a large number of ATP molecules is produced.
By the time the process of aerobic respiration ends, 36 to 38 molecules of ATP are produced from one single molecule of glucose.
True
US Food and Drug Administration(USFDA) has not approve any hormone to be used for animal that sell for consumption as food. This include any animal like pig, chicken, cow and birds. Using additional hormones raise a fear that the hormone might cause unwanted effect on the human body that consume the meat.
The organelle that's not found in plant cells are centrioles.