Yes and no. It depends on the cell
eukaryotic and only found in plants
No. Only plants have large central vacuoles.
Only in animal cells. Plant's central vacuoles can do the lysosome job there to a great extent.
Most mature plant cells have a large, central vacuole; other than that, most cells contain only small vacuoles. In plants, immature cells, such as developing cells in the meristem, do not have large, central vacuoles. Also, the vacuoles in cells of the vascular cambium fluctuate in both size and number, depending on the season.
Most mature plant cells have a large, central vacuole; other than that, most cells contain only small vacuoles. In plants, immature cells, such as developing cells in the meristem, do not have large, central vacuoles. Also, the vacuoles in cells of the vascular cambium fluctuate in both size and number, depending on the season.
Only in animal cells. Plant's central vacuoles can do the lysosome job there to a great extent.
No, only plant cells do. Animal cells do have smaller vacuoles though.
Animals don't have vacuole, only plants have vacuoles. :)
I know of only three types: central vacuole - helps maintain plants' shape and structure by storing water (hypotonic). contractile vacuole - pumps water out of protist cells to maintain a suitable concentration. food vacuole - storage for molecules that is a food source for the cell (phagocytosis).
The cell wall is defiantly only found in plant cells, not to sure about the large vacuoles though, sorry!
Chloroplasts are found in Plant Cells only because they are used for photosynthesis and animal cells do not photosynthesize.Cell walls are only found in plant cells.Large Vacuoles are found in plants because plant cells need to store more energy than animal cells.Please rate my answer as it will help score points for my profile. :) Thanks!
The structures that are only found in plant cells include the chloroplasts, central vacuole and the cell wall. These are not found in animal cells.