It is an eukariyotic organelle.It is considered to be evolved from bacteria
They are in eukariyotes.They are never in prokariyotes.
mitochondria & chloroplast
Chloroplasts are in eukariyotes.They are absent in prokariyotes
The mitochondria and chloroplast are both complex cell organelles that are found in eukaryote cells. These are both oval in shape.
Chloroplast is the ekaryote organism that photosynthesis gets its energy from.
IT is part of both actully...BUT eukaryote is having more advanced cytoplasm with more cell organlees...and prokaryote i shaving less cell organlees...
Photosynthesis takes place in the chloroplasts of a photosynthetic eukaryote. These chloroplasts contain chlorophyll and other pigments that absorb sunlight and convert it into chemical energy in the form of glucose.
In a eukaryote, the DNA is to be found in the cell's nucleus.
It is believed that cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae, evolved into the eukaryote chloroplast through a process called endosymbiosis. This process involved a cyanobacterium being engulfed by a eukaryotic cell and forming a symbiotic relationship, eventually leading to the development of the chloroplast organelle found in plant and algal cells.
The chloroplast is the organelle that enables photosynthesis. So, a cell with a chloroplast will be autotrophic, but not the chloroplast itself. A eukaryote is a type of cell with a nuclues, and other membrane bound organelles. So chloroplasts, eukaryotes, and autotrophs can't be related the way you asked in your question. I hope that helps!
cell wall and plat cell
Nucleus, ribosomes, Golgi complex, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, lyosome, chloroplast and large central vacuole (last two are in plant cells not animal cells)