Yes, Mitochondria are specific to eukaryotes.
Yes it is an organelle.It is only in eukaryotes.
Of course they have. They are only in eukariyotes
Mitochondria is a membrane bound organell.It is found only in eukaryotes.
No they do not have. They are in eukariyotes only
No, mitochondria are found in eukaryotic cells, not in prokaryotes. Mitochondria are believed to have originated from a symbiotic relationship between an ancestral eukaryotic cell and a prokaryotic cell.
No mitochondria are not present in prokaryotes. They are present in only in eukaryotes.
I'll just list 8, but be aware that there are more of them.Nucleus (only in eukaryote)RibosomesRough Endoplasmic reticulum (only in eukaryotes)Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (only in eukaryotes)Chloroplasts (only in certain eukaryotes)Mitochondria (only in eukaryotes)Nucleolus (only in eukaryotes)Lysosomes (only in animal cells)
Biologists suspect that mitochondria arose before plastids through endosymbiosis because mitochondria are present in almost all eukaryotic cells, while plastids are only found in photosynthetic eukaryotes. Additionally, mitochondria share more structural and functional similarities with their bacterial ancestors than plastids do.
No, there are some eukaryotic protists that don't have mitochondria.
They are found in both. It is found in only eukaryotes
yes.may have exceptions.
They have mitochondria for bio energy purposes so yes, they do.