No, not all plant cells have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts are only present in specialized plant cells called mesophyll cells, which are responsible for photosynthesis. Other types of plant cells, such as root cells or stem cells, do not typically contain chloroplasts.
Chloroplasts are present in plant cell cytoplasm and in some of the protists cells.
Chloroplasts are present only in plant cells.
Cell Wall and Chloroplasts
The answer is Chloroplasts Energy enters the food chain through the chloroplasts. Chloroplasts don't exist in animal cells; they are present only in plants and some protists.
In cells where they are present chloroplasts look like small green dots inside the cell when viewed with a microscope.
chloroplasts
I think it is cell walls and chloroplasts.
chloroplasts are present in plants but not in animals centrioles are present in animals but not in plants
Cell wall and Chloroplasts are present in plant cells but absent in animal cells.
Yes, chloroplasts are present in Elodea oblonga cells. Elodea is a type of aquatic plant that contains chloroplasts in its cells to facilitate photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into energy. Chloroplasts are responsible for producing energy-rich molecules that help the plant grow and survive.
No. This is because consumers do not synthesize organic compounds from inorganic compounds such as carbon dioxide and water. Producers do that. Chloroplasts are involved in photosynthesis, which is one process by which glucose may be synthesized from carbon dioxide and water. All chloroplasts are found in producers.