Plants ,algae are eukariyotes with chloroplasts. Animals and fungi do not have
No bacteria have chloroplasts. Plants have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts were originally cyanobacteria -- they are the results of an endosymbiosis between a cyanobacterium and a eukaryote.
It takes place in chloroplast.The site of photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts, for one. This is a plant organelle used in photosynthesis.
chloroplasts are organelles found in green plants and eukaryote algae
Chloroplast are organelles found in plant cells and other photosynthetic eukaryote organisms. Chloroplasts get energy from the sun and use it to make food and to produce ATP to use by animals and other consumers. Chloroplast have chlorophyll which gives plants their green color.
No bacteria have chloroplasts. Plants have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts were originally cyanobacteria -- they are the results of an endosymbiosis between a cyanobacterium and a eukaryote.
It takes place in chloroplast.The site of photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts are in eukariyotes.They are absent in prokariyotes
Chloroplasts, for one. This is a plant organelle used in photosynthesis.
chloroplasts are organelles found in green plants and eukaryote algae
Major one is plantae. But algae of protista have too
I am pretty sure all those are in animal cells.
They are in cytoplasm and on endoplasmic reticulumn.Also found in mitochondria and chloroplasts
All fungi are eukaryotes, like animals having a nucleus and mitochondria in their cells but lacking chloroplasts.
No. Animal cells do not contain chloroplasts. Photosynthesis occurs within chloroplasts. They are found in plants and other eukaryotic organisms that undergo photosynthesis (such as algae).
It is Eukaryote =]
Eukaryotic because it contains organelles (eg chloroplasts, mitochondria, etc..), it has a nucleus enclosing the DNA and it contains 80S ribosomes instead of 70S ribosomes