It's found in plant and bacteria cells.
Cell walls are only found in plants, fungi, bacteria and algae and some archae. Animals and protozoans do not have cell walls.
No. Cell walls are found in the cells of plants, bacteria, fungi and algae only. Animals and protozoa do not have cell walls.
They are found in plants, bacteria, fungi, algae, and some archaea. Animals and protozoa do not have cell walls.
From Wikipedia: Cell walls are found in plants, fungi, algae, bacteria and in some archaea. Animals and protozoa do not have cell walls.
The structures found in plants and not in animals are cell wall, chloroplasts and plastids.
cell wall
cell wall
The basic unit of life is a cell and it is found in plants and animals!
cell Wall
Bacteria are not animals. Since a long time there has been a problem in understanding whether bacteria are plants or animals. Later it was taken as plants, because alike plants, bacteria possess a cell wall. Animals do not have a cell wall. The outermost organelle in animals is the cell membrane. Furthermore, bacteria also have a primitive form of nucleus, which makes them far different from plants. Hence they are put into a different kingdom called Archae. Thus, taking cell wall into consideration, bacteria are plants. But as a whole, they are neither plants nor animals. They rule a kingdom of their own.And yes.....the word "Bacteria" is itself the plural form. The singular form is "Bacterium". So do not write "bacterias".
Cell wallChloroplastPoreThe cell wall is found in plants, though not animals.
They are found in plants, bacteria, fungi, algae, and some archaea.