Of course some cells have.Xylem parenchyma may contain chlorophyll
It does not have any vacuole. It only consists of a cell wall and no cross walls or protoplasm(nucleus, cell membrane and cytoplasm).
xylem
xylem cells have no chloroplast hence they are dead cells.
No, xylem cells are "dead" cells and therefore do not undergo cell division.
Place in plants where chloroplast is found is a permanent tissue called chlorenchyma which is a type of parenchymatous tissue.
xylem cells are *~!BLUE!~* because of the presence of lignin
xylem
xylem cells have no chloroplast hence they are dead cells.
Almost all plant cells have chloroplast. Essentially, if the plant cell is alive, it will have working chloroplasts. The xylem and phloem cells may be exempt from this generalization. Basically, any plant cell that's GREEN.
No, xylem cells are "dead" cells and therefore do not undergo cell division.
Place in plants where chloroplast is found is a permanent tissue called chlorenchyma which is a type of parenchymatous tissue.
Xylem cells are in plants not animals.
Xylem cells are found in vascular plants.
All plant cells are prokarotes. There are a few different kinds. 1. Dead cells. They are in the xylem. 2. Root hair cells. They belong in the roots and they have no chloroplast. 3. Guard cells. They form the stomata. 3. Epidermal cells. They are leaf "skin" cells. That's about it really.
xylem cells are present in the plant coducting tissue called xylem. they aren't in human body anywhere.
xylem cells are *~!BLUE!~* because of the presence of lignin
Chloroplast is plant cells because that is where photosynthesis occurs.
The chloroplast, an organelle, is found on plant cells and other eukaryotics organism that conducts photosynthesis.(they aren't in sperm cells)