Chlorophyll A, Chlorophyll B, Xanthophyll, Carotene
Some examples of chlorophyll are chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, chlorophyll c1, and chlorophyll c2. These are the most common types of chlorophyll found in plants and algae. Chlorophyll gives plants their green color and is essential for photosynthesis.
anything that is NOT Green.
All green plants contain chlorophyll and photosynthesis
Plants that are unlucky enough to loose all of their chlorophyll will not be able to produce glucose through photosynthesis and will die. This is happens if the entire plant looses chlorophyll; there are other examples of plants (such as white variegated ones) where only certain portions of the leaf have no chlorophyll, in these instances the food is produced and distributed from the areas that do contain chlorophyll to those which don't.
Organic solvents like alchohol, acetone, ether etc destroy chlorophyll. some of these solvents are used to extract chlorophyll from plant leaves.
Chlorophyll is located in organelles called chloroplasts, which in turn are located mostly in the leaves of green plants (but there are some in the stems, too).
anything that is NOT Green.
All green plants contain chlorophyll and photosynthesis
Some examples are carotenoids and phychobiliprotein. Chlorophyll is not an accessory pigment. Accessory pigments are pigments which work alongside Chlorophyll a in photosynthesis, such as carotene.
In some bacteria, chlorophyll is located in photosynthetic membranes.
The green pigment present in the leaf cell of a plant is called 'chlorophyll'.
Plants that are unlucky enough to loose all of their chlorophyll will not be able to produce glucose through photosynthesis and will die. This is happens if the entire plant looses chlorophyll; there are other examples of plants (such as white variegated ones) where only certain portions of the leaf have no chlorophyll, in these instances the food is produced and distributed from the areas that do contain chlorophyll to those which don't.
Chlorophyll, and some other pigments, but mainly chlorophyll.
To separate chlorophyll out of grass, use a pestle and mortar to grind down the grass (add some water to dilute the chlorophyll to make it easier to pour). Once you have a green 'juice' (chlorophyll) in the mortar use a plastic pipette to transfer some this out.
It has to do with the chlorophyll inside the plant . Chlorophyll comes in different colors ( not just green ) so the chlorophyll pigment determines the plants color .
every plant has chlorophyll but it can be dominant in some of the year and isn't domminant in the fall
Organic solvents like alchohol, acetone, ether etc destroy chlorophyll. some of these solvents are used to extract chlorophyll from plant leaves.
Chlorophyll is a type of pigment which is found in certain plants. Some plants which contain chlorophyll include algae and plants. Chlorophyll is green in color and accounts for most of the green found in plants.