In a chloroplast, the stacks of membranous sacs are called thylakoid membranes. Grana is the term used to refer to the stacks of thylakoids. It is in this internal part of the chloroplast where photosynthesis occurs.
grana
Grana.
No
The most relevant term in reference to chloroplasts would be thylakoids, the flattened membranous sacs within chloroplasts.
Sacs are called thylakoids.Stacks are called grana.
Stacks of flattened discs in the chloroplast that contains chlorophyll is known as grana. The singular form of the grana is granum.
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.
A membranous sac is, as it says, a sac with a membrane. What it is specifically varies. Bronchi in the lungs are membranous sacs and the amniotic sac on a baby is membranous.
The chloroplast has individual sacs called thylakoids, which are arranged in stacks called the grana. The space around those stacks, but still inside the chloroplast, is called the stroma.
First off, the wording of the question was confusing and it took me a while to figure it out. haa. But.. The disk-like membranous sacs arranged in stacks are called Grana, plural form of Granum. The grana are arranged in columns and contain individual "pancake resemblance" discs called Thylakoids.
The chloroplast has individual sacs called thylakoids, which are arranged in stacks called the grana
The most relevant term in reference to chloroplasts would be thylakoids, the flattened membranous sacs within chloroplasts.
Sacs are called thylakoids.Stacks are called grana.
No, they are not. "Membranous sac" is a descriptive term that can refer to a number of different structures, whereas a chloroplast is a clearly defined organelle with a clearly defined function (photosynthesis) There are membranous sacs found inside chloroplasts that are called thylakoids, which form the grana (singular "granum"). The thylakoid membranes contain chlorophyll and other pigments to trap energy from incoming light.
the thylakoids
Molecules of chlorophyll are located in the membranes of sacs called Thylakoids. Thylakoids are interconnected membranous sacs concentrated in stacks called grana. Thylakoids contain what the cell needs to convert light energy into chemical energy.
Vacuoles
Stacks of flattened discs in the chloroplast that contains chlorophyll is known as grana. The singular form of the grana is granum.
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.
A membranous sac is, as it says, a sac with a membrane. What it is specifically varies. Bronchi in the lungs are membranous sacs and the amniotic sac on a baby is membranous.