A group of animal cells working together forms animal tissue. Groups of tissues working together form organs.
Animal and fungi are not photosynthetic. So plant is the answer
A tissue is many cells (which perform a similar function) joined together to perform a task
Plant cells contain chloroplasts with the pigment chlorophyll (an this allows them to photosynthesise) whereas Animal cells don't have chloroplasts
Specialized animal cells are cells found in animals that perform specific functions and only those specific functions. Examples include nerve cells, muscle cells and red blood cells.
tissue
tissue
Tissues are a bunch of cells working together to perform the same function, and organs are a bunch of tissues working together to perform the same function.
No. Cells are very specific to their tasks and are not the same. Muscle cells cannot perform the function of nerve cells, and so on.
A group of similar cells working together to perform a function is the definition of a tissue.
If they are of the same cell type and function together, they are called a tissue.
Bacterial cells, animal cells, and plant cells all have DNA. DNA contains information for the cell on how to perform tasks. In plant and animal cells, DNA is contained in a nucleus, unlike bacterial cells where DNA is contained in a nucleoid.Hope this helped
desmosomes