Nn,bacteria do not have.They have photosynthetic filaments.
Chloroplasts are NOT cells - so your answer would be no. BUT if you mean do chloroplasts exist in bacteria then the answer is Sometimes. Where the answer is yes the bacteria is referred to as blue-green algae.
Nn,bacteria do not have.They have photosynthetic filaments.
No. Only eucaryotic cells can have chloroplasts in them.
Bacteria are Monera. Chloroplasts belong to Protista. Bacteria Do not have chloroplast which prepare food and are parasites while chloroplasts have chloroplast and prepare their own food. Diatoms are chloroplasts
No. Prokaryotic cells are bacteria cells. Chloroplasts are found in plants. They are made of chlorophyll and they are what makes the plants green.
No. Chloroplasts are a characteristic of plants and green algae, which have nuclei in their cells. However, some bacteria, which lack nuclei photosynthesize using chlorophyll, but that chlorophyll is not contained withing chloroplasts.
No. Chloroplasts are only found in plant cells. They basically carry out the process of photosynthesis to provide the glucose and oxygen necessary for plants' survival.
No they don't.They are only in eukariyotes. Prokariyotes have photosynthetic filaments
Bacteria usually don't have all the organelles that plant and animal cells do, such as mitochondria, chloroplasts (plants), golgi apparatus, smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulums, etc. Bacteria cells are simple as compared to the plant and animal cells.
Chloroplasts and mitochondria. It is believed they were engulfed by the cells because of the dual membrane present on both. Both are believed to have originated from an endosymbiotic bacteria. Mitochondria's inner matrices contain DNA, and they have many features similar to those of bacteria. Chloroplasts are believed to have come from an endosymbiotic cyanobacteria.
Chloroplasts are present only in plant cells.
The presence of a double membrane in chloroplasts, similar to that in prokaryotic cells, is a characteristic that suggests they may have evolved from free-living bacteria. Additionally, chloroplasts contain their own circular DNA, similar to bacteria, and replicate independently within the cell.