no
Chloroplast does not have cristae but mitochondria does. Instead, chloroplast's inner membrane have thylakoids, which are flattened sacs. Thylakoids at times form grana, which are disk stacks.
yes they have a inner and outer membrane
I'm unable to draw images. However, I can describe the structure of a chloroplast for you. A chloroplast consists of an inner and outer membrane that encloses a fluid called the stroma. Within the stroma, a network of interconnected membrane sacs called thylakoids are present. These thylakoids are stacked into structures called grana, which contain chlorophyll pigment molecules that are essential for photosynthesis.
The parts of a chloroplast are thylakoid, grana, inner membrane, outer membrane, intermembrane space, stroma, and stroma.
Chlorophyll is the substance found in chlorolast which is responsible for photosynthesis. The sites in the chloroplast where chlorophyll is found in the inner and outer membrane. A third site is in the membrance of the thylakoid where chlorophyll and carotenoids are found in the granum (stack of thylakoids).
Two membranes enclose the contents of the chloroplast - the outer membrane and the inner membrane.
A highly speacialised that transports protein
No, mitochondria do not have thylakoids. Thylakoids are a membrane system containing chlorophyll found in chloroplasts, while mitochondria have inner and outer membranes but do not contain thylakoids. Mitochondria are involved in cellular respiration, not photosynthesis like chloroplasts.
The space between the inner chloroplast membrane and the grana is called the stroma.
thylakoids.
In the inner thylakoid membrane of the chloroplasts.
This structure is the chloroplast, which is the site of photosynthesis in plant and algal cells. The inner membrane of the chloroplast is highly folded to increase the surface area available for reactions to occur.