Bacteria do not have chloroplasts.Only eukariyotes have them.
No. Only eucaryotic cells can have chloroplasts in them.
There is a single purpose. It is doing photosynthesis.
Its function is to carry photosynthesis.It produces food for plant.
Bacteria are Monera. Chloroplasts belong to Protista. Bacteria Do not have chloroplast which prepare food and are parasites while chloroplasts have chloroplast and prepare their own food. Diatoms are chloroplasts
Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast, an organelle found in plant cells as well as certain bacteria.
NO chloroplast has to do with plants (I think)
Chloroplasts are NOT cells - so your answer would be no. BUT if you mean do chloroplasts exist in bacteria then the answer is Sometimes. Where the answer is yes the bacteria is referred to as blue-green algae.
no they do not
No bacteria does not have any chloplasts.
Bacteria
yes plant cells have chloroplast because that is how they make their food!!
Bacteria have prokariyotic cells.They do not have chloroplasts.