Green.
okay, animal cells don't have chloroplasts!! only plant cells do!! chloroplasts give the plant its green color!!
chlorophyll. It appears to be green but is truly yellow-orange in color.
I believe that chloroplasts are green. The link below will help you to understand better.
Yes they have chloroplasts. They are used for photosynthsis
Melanocytes
They are in chloroplasts. There ,in the thylakoids
green pigments
Carotenoids.
Accessory pigments are found in plant cells and cyanobacteria. The thylakoid is the compartment, or organelle, where they are stored.
The chloroplasts in their cells contain chlorophyll pigments. These pigments absorb sunlight from all from all of the color spectrum except green. That light is used for photosynthesis and the green light is reflected back out and makes the plant look green.
Because they contain photosynthetic pigments. Main pigments are the chlorophylls.
There is NO chloroplasts in animal cells. There is only in plant cells because chloroplasts give plants there green color.
Most plant cells are colorless unless there are chloroplasts or chromoplasts (tomatoes, carrots, radish) present in the cells. In some cases, there may be pigments in the vacuole of the cell. There are many internal cells that have no pigments. Source: Biology instructor for 4 years
okay, animal cells don't have chloroplasts!! only plant cells do!! chloroplasts give the plant its green color!!
chlorophyll. It appears to be green but is truly yellow-orange in color.
I believe that chloroplasts are green. The link below will help you to understand better.
They contain pigments which absorbs color of light. They reflect green light