Chlorophyll
The green disc found in palisade cells are called Chloroplasts.
Chlorophyll
The green disc found in palisade cells refers to chloroplasts, which are organelles responsible for photosynthesis in plant cells. These chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, the pigment that captures light energy and converts it into chemical energy, allowing plants to produce glucose and oxygen from carbon dioxide and water. Palisade cells, located beneath the upper epidermis of leaves, are tightly packed with chloroplasts to maximize light absorption for efficient photosynthesis.
Palisade cells play and important role in the leaves of a plant by absorbing most of the light used in photosynthesis. This absorption occurs in chloroplasts. These organelles contain large amounts of the pigment chlorophyll which gives them their green color.
palisade cells are special for photosynthesis. photosynthesis needs a green chemical called chloroplasts. without chloroplasts the palisade cells would never be able to get sunlight and live.
To make a palisade cell model, you can use materials like green pipe cleaners for chloroplasts, foam or clay for the cell walls, and small beads or pom-poms for the cell nucleus. Arrange the materials in a column shape to represent the elongated structure of a palisade cell. You can also add details like ribosomes or mitochondria using small beads or stickers.
cell wall
Cell wall
In the thylakoid , in the chloroplasts, mostly concentrated in palisade mesophyll of a leaf.
cell wall
Cell wall
cell wall