Biology, asked by yuvrajpro, 5 months ago

Why do plants convert starch into glucose before utilization?

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Answers

Answered by NehaChristin
2
In tubers, rhizomes and other starch-storing plant organs, it also acts as a place to store food for later use. When the plant needs the energy in the starch, it converts the starch grains back into glucose.
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Answered by Anonymous
1

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⏩In tubers, rhizomes and other starch-storing plant organs, it also acts as a place to store food for later use. When the plant needs the energy in the starch, it converts the starch grains back into glucose.

⏩Glucose is soluble, thus it is converted to starch as it is insoluble so that it cannot escape from the cells. ... The stored starch (converting it into glucose) can be used later by the cells to release energy by respiration.

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