No to all of the above. Plant and animal cells do not have the same shape. Plant cells have chloroplasts. Animal cells do not. Plants have a cell wall. Animal cells have a cell membrane. However there is one atom difference between a plant's chlorophyl and a human's hemoglobin. 53% of the DNA in a human and a banana tree is the same. Similarities exist.
Lysosome ,Centriole, and VesicleActually, animal cells do not have any different organelles than plant cells, other than plant cells having a membrane. animal cells do not have a membrane, they have a cell wall.
There is NO chloroplasts in animal cells. There is only in plant cells because chloroplasts give plants there green color.
They are in plant cells. They are absent in animal cells
Chloroplasts are found ONLY in plant cells - they are used for photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts are found in plant cells, not animal cells. Plants are photosynthetic and animals are not. Thus it is the plants that contain chloroplasts.
Yes, cells have organelles. The organelles are like the organs of the cell.
Chloroplasts.
These parts are the cell wall (animal cells just have a cell membrane) and the vacuole. Plants also have chloroplasts which animal cells do not have.
All animal cells have a nucleus and mitochondria. The cell you are describing is a prokaryotic cell, such as a bacterium.
Plants have chloroplasts, which contain the pigment chlorophyll, which is why they are green. Chloroplasts are never in animals.
actually only plants have chloroplasts to store chlorophyll
Animal cells have a cell membrane, centrioles, and mitochondria. Plant cells have a cell wall and cell membrane, chloroplasts and chlorophyll.