By one user: This is because they are very stupid. Edited by RingetteGirl : We study plant cells to learn how plants work, make food [photosynthesis], and grow. Anybody who has nothing to do but write stupid comments such as; "This is because they are very stupid" is not giving out correct information and is just a pointless answer to put down. SO please stop giving out answers that mean nothing.
The importance of studying plant cell walls is that we learn how plant cells are regulated. Also, the wall is how the plant maintains its shape, so that can tell us how/why certain plants have specific shapes and levels of hardness, just based on the wall structure.
The important thing to know about plant cell is that we have to know all parts of it like nucleaus,cytoplasm,and ect....
Because scientists have seen them.You can use a microscope to observe them.
yes!!
Matthias Schleiden was the first to study plant cells under the microscope! =)
Robert Hooke coined the term cell after visualizing plant tissue under the microscope. The plant cells reminded him of the cells that monks lived in in a monastery.
It will make them stand out more under a microscope
Maybe
The invention of the microscope allowed the first view of cells. English physicist and microscopist Robert Hooke (1635-1702) first described cells in 1665. ... of cork and likened the boxy partitions he observed to the cells (small rooms) in a ... plant cells and established the presence of cellular structures throughout the plant.
The invention of the microscope allowed the first view of cells. English physicist and microscopist Robert Hooke (1635-1702) first described cells in 1665. ... of cork and likened the boxy partitions he observed to the cells (small rooms) in a ... plant cells and established the presence of cellular structures throughout the plant.
Because scientists have seen them.You can use a microscope to observe them.
You can scrape the inside part of your cell and examine the cheek cells. Also, you can use various plants such as an Elodea plant. If it is alive and wet, it is better.
Hooke
Elodea
yes!!
WikiAnswers cannot read your mind to know what you did or did not observe.
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke looked at a cork under a microscope, not plant cells!
Matthias Schleiden was the first to study plant cells under the microscope! =)