Chloroplasts are organelles found in plant cells that conduct photosynthesis. Chloroplasts absorb light and use it in conjunction with water and carbon dioxide to produce sugars, the raw material for energy and biomass production in all green plants and the animals that depend on them, directly or indirectly, for food
Chloroplasts are the organelles that contain chlorophyll in plant cells. Chlorophyll is a pigment that plays a key role in the process of photosynthesis, where it captures light energy and converts it into chemical energy.
Chloroplasts are the main source of ATP (the cell's energy) for the cell to use. This is the only organelle structure that uses photosynthesis to create glucose, which is then made into NADH and ATP.
They carry out photosynthesis. Plants are autotrophs (self-feeders) that is, they are able to produce their own organic molecules, from inorganic materials, via photosynthesis. Chloroplasts were originally bacteria, that were engulfed - but not fully digested - by an ancient eukaryote. Since that time there has been a symbiotic relationship between the bacterium and its host. By now, neither is viable without the other anymore.
Palisade cells contain many chloroplasts because they are responsible for photosynthesis, which requires chlorophyll in the chloroplasts to capture light energy and convert it into chemical energy. The numerous chloroplasts help maximize the surface area available for light absorption, enhancing the efficiency of photosynthesis in the cells.
Glucose molecules are built during photosynthesis through a series of chemical reactions in the chloroplasts of plant cells. Carbon dioxide is combined with water using energy from sunlight to produce glucose and oxygen as a byproduct. This process involves the conversion of light energy into chemical energy that is stored in the bonds of glucose molecules.
Chloropasts are only found in plants because, they have colors that absorb sunlight and animals don't. Chloropasts use energy from the Sun to make food and animals don't.
Chloroplasts are not present in animals, from what I know.
Every one have mitochondia. Only some have chloropasts
Animals does not make food, so they do not chloroplasts in their body. So they will obtain their energy from food. (This is a rather short answer)
The endosymbiotic theory explains the origin of chloropasts and mitochondia. Symbiosis is the mutual benefit of two organisms living together. This was the basis of the theory.
The pigment chlorophyll which is actually struck by photons of light and energized enough to give an electron to photosystem II, thus a part of the photosynthetic process.
Chloroplasts are the organelles that contain chlorophyll in plant cells. Chlorophyll is a pigment that plays a key role in the process of photosynthesis, where it captures light energy and converts it into chemical energy.
Chloroplasts are the main source of ATP (the cell's energy) for the cell to use. This is the only organelle structure that uses photosynthesis to create glucose, which is then made into NADH and ATP.
They carry out photosynthesis. Plants are autotrophs (self-feeders) that is, they are able to produce their own organic molecules, from inorganic materials, via photosynthesis. Chloroplasts were originally bacteria, that were engulfed - but not fully digested - by an ancient eukaryote. Since that time there has been a symbiotic relationship between the bacterium and its host. By now, neither is viable without the other anymore.
Chloroplasts in plant cells are responsible for photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert light energy into chemical energy in the form of glucose. The chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, a green pigment that captures light energy to drive the photosynthetic process.
Palisade cells contain many chloroplasts because they are responsible for photosynthesis, which requires chlorophyll in the chloroplasts to capture light energy and convert it into chemical energy. The numerous chloroplasts help maximize the surface area available for light absorption, enhancing the efficiency of photosynthesis in the cells.
Chloroplasts are organelles (structures within cells) that trap light energy and convert it into chemical energy, which is to say energy that can be stored. The process is called photosynthesis, and involves synthesizing (building) sugar molecules from the inorganic compounds carbon dioxide and water. Within chloroplasts there are membranes in which are embedded molecules of chlorophyll, which is essential for the trapping of light energy. Chloroplasts have their own DNA, with more than 80 genes, and are believed to be descendants of ancestral free-living prokaryotes, which formed an endosymbiotic relationship with larger cells. Chloroplasts are found in plants and algae.