Elodea Plant Cell
No. An elodea is a species of aquatic plant.
yes because the elodea is a plant cell
Yes, all cells do, to contain and protect anything inside.
to hold in moisture
no
The human epithelial cells are thick and boxlike whereas elodea cells are thin and platelike. The cells of elodea are rigid and rectangular in shape.
First of all elodea cells are plant cells while epithelial cells are animal. Which means elodea has: a cell wall, chloroplasts, and are square shaped. Animal Cells: round, don't have cell walls just a membrane, and because they are heterotrophic they don't have chloroplasts.
Elodea and onion cells have more consistent shapes than human epithelial cells because they have cell walls. The human epithelial cells do not have defined cell walls.
No. An elodea is a species of aquatic plant.
A Plant Cell
Both. Both cells are plant cells and plant cells have chloroplasts. (Elodea is the waterweeds)
no
yes because the elodea is a plant cell
No, cells from the elodea plant are not organisms because they cannot live on their own like the paramecium.
Yes, all cells do, to contain and protect anything inside.
Elodea is a Eukaryote. Prokaryotic consists of bacteria whereas Eukaryotes are plants and animals. Eukaryotes have a nucleas, Prokaryotes do not.
It is a plant that is composed of eukaryotic cells.