The cell membrane is found in the cytoplasm of bacterial cells!!
yeah...um...that's completely wrong...
a cell membrane is found in eukaryotic organisms, not bacteria, and it surrounds the cytoplasm.
bacteria have free floating (non-membrane bound) ribosomes, and most have circular chromosomes
Bacterial chromosomes and ribosomes are found in the cytoplasm. Depending on the specific bacteria plasmids, membranes, nutrient storage and carboxysomes could also be found there.
cell membrane
mitochondria,ribosomes,dna,rna
NO, it surounds the cytoplasm in a cell
All cells do.
In bacteria, cellular respiration occurs in the cytoplasm.
The chloroplast is an organelle found in animal cells and photosynthetic bacteria. Cytoplasm is the contents of the plant cell, including the nucleus, but excludes the cytosol, the organelles and other liquids
Bacteria cells differ from mammal cells because they have no nucleus and have genetic material which is stringy and thick found in cytoplasm
NO, it surounds the cytoplasm in a cell
No. Cytoplasm is the name of the liquid substance in which cell organelles "float". Bacteria contain cytoplasm but they are not the same thing.
The genetic material in a bacteria cell is found in the cytoplasm.
In cytoplasm of a bacteria cell
perhaps
It is first surrounded by cell membrane.After that there is a cell wall.
to make the cell sexually active and to replicate
To be a bacteria you have to be a single celled organism that has a cell wall, a cytoplasm, and a cell membrane. Done by an expert!
Yes bacteria do have cytoplasm but as bacteria is a prokaryotic it does not have membrane bound cytoplasmic organalles and also not have distinct nucleus, as the eukaryotic cell posses
to make the cell sexually active and to replicate
All cells do.
No, bacteria can not endocytosise another bacteria. bacteria contains cell wall, DNA called nucleoid and cytoplasm. Bacteria can make its own proteins by its ribosomes..No, they do not. They are not large enough for more bacteria inside.