no
Animal Cells Are Smaller than Plant Cells
Yes, a frog egg is bigger than an animal cell. Frog eggs are macroscopic and visible to the human eye, while animal cells are microscopic and can only be seen under a microscope. Frog eggs contain a large amount of cytoplasm and organelles compared to a single animal cell.
The plant cell is smaller than the animal cell
plant cell - is bigger than animals cell
That would be the vacuole.
Never house a pacman frog with any other animal. Pacman frogs will not hesitate to eat anything smaller than them.
Plant cells are generally larger than animal cells, and both are significantly larger than bacterial cells. Plant cells have a rigid cell wall that provides structural support and allows them to grow larger than animal cells, which do not have cell walls. Bacterial cells are much smaller than both plant and animal cells.
Usually a frog is smaller and smoother than a toad
Bacteria cells are smaller than animal cells. While a bacteria cell is about one micron, an animal cell is about 10 microns. From this data, about ten bacteria cells will fit into an animal cell.
Yes, vacuoles are present in animal cells. However, animal cells typically have smaller and fewer vacuoles compared to plant cells. Vacuoles in animal cells play a role in storing water, nutrients, and waste products, as well as maintaining cell structure and stability.
no actually the vacuole is bigger in the plant cell
A virus does not have any organelle that is found in animal or plant cellVirus is surrounded by capsid, a protein shell, rather than cell membrane and cell wall.A virus is much smaller than an animal or a plant cell. It is even much smaller than a bacterial cell.Virus is not considered to be a cell, nor is it composed of cells.Rather than a nucleus, the nucleic acid of virus is housed in a protein shell, called capsid.Virus can only divide once inside a host cell, where it assembles clones of itself.Unlike animal or plants, viruses are not classified via binomial nomenclature.