Prokariyotes do not have chloroplast.Only eukariyotes have it.
all prokaryotes and eukaryotes
in prokaryotes, everywhere in the cellin eukaryotes, in the nucleus
Prokaryotes: * single-cellular * do not have membrane-bound organelles (such as mitochondria or chloroplasts) * transcription and translation of DNA can occur simultaneously due to the fact that there is no nuclear membrane Eukaryotes: * can be multi-cellular * contain membrane-bound organelles
The green parts are involved. Main ones are the leaves
Eukaryotic cells contain a membrane-bound nucleus.
cytoplasm is found in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes.
hey are only in eukaryotes. They are never in prokaryotes.
There are three main differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Prokaryotes lack a cell nucleus while eukaryotes are made up of cells that all contain a membrane bound nucleus. While prokaryotes have a single cell make-up, eukaryotes have multiple cells. Prokaryotes has DNA without any real structure, while eukaryotes has a well structured DNA system that is organized into chromosomes.
Eukaryotes most likely evolved from prokaryotes.
Prokaryotes doesnt have a membrane its organelles pretty much just float around unlike eukaryotes it contains a membrane where the organelles are kept proteinsynthesis in prokaryotes- it doesnt not contain "noncoding" meaning it doesnt have introns
Prokaryotes are primarily found in the domains Bacteria and Archaea. Eukaryotes are contained within the domain Eukarya, which includes kingdoms such as Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, and Protista. While prokaryotes are unicellular organisms without a nucleus, eukaryotes can be either unicellular or multicellular and possess a defined nucleus.
There are two basic types of cells, prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Eukaryotes differ from prokaryotes in a few ways, but the biggest difference is that eukaryotes have a nucleus and prokaryotes don't.