The answer is a Vacuole
Vacuoles
chloroplast
vestigial structure.what is that store the waste materials
VacuoleThe saclike storage structure found in both animal and plant cells is the vacuole. A vacuole is a membrane enclosed structure that is filled with water containing various dissolved substances.
vacoule
A vacuole.
Vacuoles are saclike organelles that store materials such as water, nutrients, and waste products in plant and fungal cells. They help maintain turgor pressure and store important molecules for various cellular processes.
In cells, vacuoles store inorganic and organic materials. The "storage" of the cell.
Vacuoles are saclike organelles that store materials such as water, nutrients, and waste products within plant and fungal cells. Vacuoles help maintain cell turgor pressure, support the cell structure, and can also perform functions like waste isolation and pigment storage.
The organelle you are referring to is the vacuole. Vacuoles are membrane-bound sacs found in cells, primarily in plant cells, where they store essential materials such as nutrients, water, and ions, as well as waste products. In plant cells, a large central vacuole helps maintain turgor pressure, contributing to cell structure and stability. In animal cells, vacuoles are generally smaller and serve similar storage and waste management functions.
Plant cells store their dissolved materials, such as salts and sugars, in their vacuoles. The vacuole is a membrane-bound organelle that acts as a storage compartment for various substances in the plant cell.
Vacuoles are the organelles in a cell that store mainly water, but they can also store things like carbohydrates and sodium too.