yes elodea cells do. They use it to move.
An Elodea Cell is a multi-celled cell. It has a cell wall, ploraplats, and Cytoplasm. It also moves and grows. It is an underwater plant with grass-like leaves.
up my asss
similarities: cell wall present, cytoplasm, both eukaryote. difrences: elodea cell smaller vacuoles chloroplasts present unicellular onion cell: large vacuoles multicellular
An elodea cell does not have a organsim because it is NOT an organism.
Is Elodea cell an organism?
The cheek cell is an animal cell and the Elodea cell is a plant cell. Both cells have have a Nucleus, Nucleolus, Nuclear Membrane, Mitochondrion, Centrosome, Rough ER, Smooth ER, Ribosomes, Golgi body, Cell membrane, Cytoplasm and Vacuole. However, there are some parts that the animal cell have that a plant cell does not and there are some parts a plant cell have that an animal cell does not. You can look at the pictures in the URLs [related links].
Both paramecium and elodea cells are eukaryotic cells with membrane-bound organelles. They both have a cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus, and other organelles like mitochondria and vacuoles. Additionally, both cells are involved in processes such as growth, metabolism, and reproduction.
No. An elodea is a species of aquatic plant.
A cheek cell is a eukaryotic animal cell that contains a nucleus and organelles, whereas an elodea cell is a eukaryotic plant cell with a cell wall and chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Additionally, elodea cells may have a large central vacuole for support and storage.
Plasmolysis is the reason because it always has water to keep it full.
In a normal elodea cell in tap water, chloroplasts are primarily located in the cytoplasm of the cell, specifically in the cells of the mesophyll tissue of the plant. They are most abundantly found in the upper layers of the leaf, near the surface exposed to light.
Yes Elodea is a freshwater aquatic plant frequently used in aquaria. Elodea is also known as Anacharis and is frequently used in microbiology demonstrations because it exhibits "streaming" cytoplasm.