yes
You can't see chloroplasts in an onion skin cell since the onion was underground. When the onion is underground, the sun can't reach the onion so the onion skin cells can't make glucose. The onion does have chloroplasts in its cells at the top of the onion. That's where he sunlight can reach the onion.
yes it can, if its a plant, then it has chloroplasts
Both. Both cells are plant cells and plant cells have chloroplasts. (Elodea is the waterweeds)
The structures that are found in the hydrilla which are not found in the onion cell are chloroplasts, specifically the stomata and chlorophyll. Onions lack these structures because they grow underground.
As an onion cell is a cell, no cells are located in it, but maybe you mean organelles, which literally mean "tiny organs" and make up every cell. In that case, onion cells lack chloroplasts because they grow underground and therefore don't use the sun to produce energy (chloroplasts are involved in photosynthesis).
An onion cell has a cell wall and a large central vacuole, both of which are not present in mammalian blood cells. Additionally, onion cells have chloroplasts for photosynthesis, while blood cells do not contain chloroplasts.
The onion cell represents a plant cell, specifically from the onion bulb (Allium cepa). Plant cells, like those in onions, have a distinct cell wall, which provides structural support, as well as chloroplasts for photosynthesis (though onion cells typically do not contain chloroplasts as they grow underground). They also feature a large central vacuole that helps maintain turgor pressure. These characteristics differentiate them from animal cells, which lack a cell wall and chloroplasts.
No, you cannot observe chloroplasts in onion cells because onion cells do not contain chloroplasts. Onions belong to a group of plants known as monocots, which typically lack chloroplasts in their cells. Chloroplasts are mostly found in the cells of green plants that undergo photosynthesis.
Because an onion develops in the ground, and chloroplasts develop in the sunlight. Therefore no chloroplasts form. Think of it this way: Tree leaves contain chloroplasts because they contain chlorophyll in order for the leaves to turn colors. But who has ever heard of an onion changing colors because it's fall?! Onions dont needchloroplasts, so they dont have them.
No chloroplasts in cheek and onion cells
A yeast cell is a unicellular fungus, while an onion skin cell is part of a multicellular plant tissue. Yeast cells are typically oval or round and reproduce asexually through budding, whereas onion skin cells are rectangular and have a rigid cell wall made of cellulose. Additionally, yeast cells lack chloroplasts and do not perform photosynthesis, unlike onion cells, which contain chloroplasts for this purpose. Lastly, yeast cells have a more flexible cell membrane, while onion skin cells have a more rigid structure due to their cell wall.
Onion cells do not contain chloroplasts because onions are not photosynthetic organisms. Chloroplasts are only found in plant cells that require photosynthesis to produce energy for the cell. Onions obtain their energy through other metabolic processes and do not need chloroplasts for this purpose.