yes.. the chloroplast can be seen under the compound microscope. in the compound microscope,
1. at 10x, it visualized as the mesh up of the green dots.
2. at 40X, chloroplast can be visualized as the green patches which are in the oval shape and some liquid flowing through the cell in narrow path.
3. at 100X, it is little bit more clearly visible if the immersion oil lens is used carefully..
I've never seen a chloroplast before today. The tiny chloroplast is busy conducting photosynthesis, even as we speak.
the microorganisms are seen in a micro scope.
Cell wall, nucleus and chloroplasts can be seen with a compound light microscope under a total magnification of 400 X. The chloroplasts are self pigmented hence visible. Cell wall and nucleus being very dense are also visible without staining.
They are in plants. They cannot be seen in animals
Chloroplasts, because the onion does not undergo photosynthesis. The onion plant does but the onion itself is a bulb.
Chloplast cannot be seen in animals.They are in plant cells.
Stroma is the semi liquid portion.It can be seen in mid region.
in a plant cell.It also can be seen in algae and some protists. It is the site of photosynthesis
Protists are eukaryotic organisms. Photosynthetic protists have chloroplasts.
Yes
Mainly it is plant structure. But can be seen in algae ans some other protists too
A mold is a fungus typically grows on decaying plants, food. It is a heterotroph and does not use photosynthesis. A fern is a bryophyte and has a vascular system and uses photosynthesis.