No they do not have. Not even a single cell
no, mushroom cells don't have chloroplast because mushrooms are fungi and not plants.
fungi cell
They are always hetrotrophic. They only have mitochondia,but never chloroplasts
No. Chloroplasts are only present in plants and some protists. Chloroplasts make plants autotrophic by allowing producing their own food, whereas fungi are heterotrophic, where they release enzymes to break down nutrients from the environment and absorb that broken down food. No
Fungi were once grouped with the kingdom plantae, whoever scientists decided that Fungi were too fundamentally different from plants because they lacked chloroplast and chlorophyll, they had no stems or roots, and Fungi are decomposers not producers. so scientists gave Fungi their own kingdom.
No.Yeast are type of fungi.No fungi is photosynthetic
These organisms would be eukaryotes, likely belonging to the fungi kingdom. Fungi have cells with a cell wall (made of chitin) and a nucleus, but they lack chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Instead, fungi obtain nutrients through absorption.
Yeast is a single celled fungi and a plant is multicellular. Yeast also doesn't have chloroplast. A plant does
no fungi grows on you and alge grows in the water Actually, I disagree with the above answer, so I'm improving. They do have similarities. Both fungi and algae prefer to live in moist environments. Both can range in size from a single-celled organism to much larger, multi-celled organisms. Both have haploid nuclei (only one chromosome instead of two).
Chloroplast
Animal cells doesn't need any Chloroplast to live because all the nutritions, Protins,Oxygen and other substance are carried by blood.So, Like plant cells animal cell don't need any chloroplast to survive
Chloroplast perform photosynthesis.