The chloroplasts of plant cells produce sugar.
chloroplasts
Chloroplasts in plant cells use the energy in light to produce sugar.
Chloroplasts in the plant's leaves are responsible for making sugar through the process of photosynthesis. The chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, which captures sunlight and converts it into chemical energy that is used to produce sugars from carbon dioxide and water.
carbon dioxide
The chloroplasts of plant cells produce sugar.
chloroplasts
chloroplasts
Chloroplasts in plant cells use the energy in light to produce sugar.
Yes, chloroplasts are the organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plants, where they convert sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into sugar (glucose) and oxygen. This process fuels the plant's growth and provides it with energy.
Chloroplasts are organelles in plant cells that produce glucose.
Chloroplasts in the plant's leaves are responsible for making sugar through the process of photosynthesis. The chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, which captures sunlight and converts it into chemical energy that is used to produce sugars from carbon dioxide and water.
Chloroplasts are the organelles in plant cells that convert light energy into sugar through the process of photosynthesis. Within the chloroplasts, the pigment chlorophyll captures the light energy and uses it to drive the chemical reactions that produce sugar molecules.
Chloroplasts take in water and sunlight and turn it into food for the plant, glucose sugar. The byproduct/ waste is oxygen.
Chloroplasts. Plants use chloroplasts to perform photosynthesis and produce sugars from sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide. Animals do not have chloroplasts, so they cannot make sugars through photosynthesis.
carbon dioxide
I don't believe so. PLANT CELLS and such can produce ATP anaerobically in complete darkness; but chloroplasts are mechanisms inside that cell whose sole purpose is to produce glucose sugar and ATP for the cell. So without light, chloroplasts don't have a job to do.