Chloroplast are in eukariyotes.They are not in prokariyotes.
No,they do not have.They have photosynthetic filaments.
The plasmid is found in prokaryotic cells.
A chloroplast is neither, because it is in a cell. Prokaryotic means that there is no cell organization, which are bacteria, and a chloroplast is again not its own cell, so it can't be that. Eukaryotic means it has a nucleus that stores the DNA. The chloroplast can be found in both of these types of cells, but it can't be either of them because it doesn't have its own DNA.
A chloroplast is a organelle within the Plant Eukaryote. It is used by plants only to convert sunlight into energy (like solar panels). They use chlorophyll to do this, which gives the plants their green color.
No, prokaryotic cells do not have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts are found in eukaryotic cells and are the organelles responsible for photosynthesis. Prokaryotic cells, which include bacteria and archaea, lack membrane-bound organelles.
By definition, prokaryotic cells cannot have chloroplasts. This is either a trick question or the answer should replace prokaryotic with eukaryotic. In eukaryotic cells, the chloroplast serves as an energy translator. It takes energy from photons and translates it into usable energy for the cell via carbon compounds. These carbon compounds are eventually combined to form sugars.
They are not containing them. only eukaryotic cells contain.
Micrasterias cells have a cell wall and a cell membrane and also has chloroplast which is found in plant cells and plants are Eukaryotes. In micrasterias there is a mitochondrion which is a type of organelle. Eukaryotes do have organelles while Prokaryotic cells do not
prokaryotic cells are often unicellular organisms or bacteria.
The nuclear envelope is found in eukaryotic cells, not in prokaryotic cells.
They aren't. Chloroplast is found strictly in plant cells and Lysosomes are found strictly in animal cells.
Organisms made of prokaryotic cells are found in the Kingdom Monera.