Chloroplasts, in the leaf's pallisade cells, do in fact store light energy. They absorb red and blue light energy to power photosynthesis, and reflect green light,which is why they appear green.
[By Fifth form advanced Science student] =)
the answer is chloroplasts
Chloroplasts do not produce energy.They convert light energy into chemical energy.
Mitochondria and Chloroplasts are involved in energy conversion.
Chloroplasts
No, chloroplasts are the energy producing part of plants.
what would most be likely happen if green plant were exposed to longer days in sunlight
Chloroplasts convert sunlight into potential energy. The energy is then converted into the chemical energy in the glucose molecules.
The function of chloroplasts in plant cells is to convert energy from sunlight into usable energy within the cell.
The parts of the single-celled algae that are responsible for capturing energy are chloroplasts. Chloroplasts have to be there in order for cells to capture energy.
nope, they get there energy from food not from the sun
The sunlight/energy is collected by chloroplasts.
plant cells