A peanut is not a nut, but actually a seed. In addition to containing protein, a peanut is rich in fats and carbohydrates. Fats and carbohydrates are the major sources of energy for plants and animals.


The energy contained in the peanut actually came from the sun. Green plants absorb solar energy and use it in photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are combined to make glucose. Glucose is a simple sugar that is a type of carbohydrate. Oxygen gas is also made during photosynthesis.


The glucose made during photosynthesis is used by plants to make other important chemical substances needed for living and growing. Some of the chemical substances made from glucose include fats, carbohydrates (such as various sugars, starch, and cellulose), and proteins.


Photosynthesis is the way in which green plants make their food, and ultimately, all the food available on earth. All animals and nongreen plants (such as fungi and bacteria) depend on the stored energy of green plants to live. Photosynthesis is the most important way animals obtain energy from the sun.


Oil squeezed from nuts and seeds is a potential source of fuel. In some parts of the world, oil squeezed from seeds-particularly sunflower seeds-is burned as a motor fuel in some farm equipment. In the United States, some people have modified diesel cars and trucks to run on vegetable oils.


Fuels from vegetable oils are particularly attractive because, unlike fossil fuels, these fuels are renewable. They come from plants that can be grown in a reasonable amount of time.
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Comments

8 Responses to “Do Plants Store Energy?”

  1. Aurora Lipper says:

    Sure, you can use a hazelnut, but be sure to remove it from the shell first.

  2. ann_price says:

    I don’t have peanuts can I use a hazelnut instead of a peanut ?

  3. Instead of the peanut, you can try a dried bean, such as the kind used to make soup. Instead of the peanut shell, you can try dried corn husk.

  4. elissa_starosto says:

    We have nut allergies. Can we use something other than a nut shell?

  5. matthannan1 says:

    My son thought this was the coolest experiment!:-)

  6. You need to take the shell out – it doesn’t have the right type of stuff we want for sustained combustion (namely, oil) – it will burn quickly and then fizzle out.

  7. kelly_siebert says:

    would a shelled pecan work instead of a peanut?

  8. vanwentzelfamily says:

    I used sunflower seeds for it and wen I tried Burning the shell and the seed at the same time it didn’t work the same way