A stack of thylakoids is called a stroma.
A stack of thylakoids is called a stroma.
In a chloroplast, the stacks of membranous sacs are called thylakoid membranes. Grana is the term used to refer to the stacks of thylakoids. It is in this internal part of the chloroplast where photosynthesis occurs.
A stack of thylakoids is called a stroma.
grana
A stack of thylakoids is called a stroma.
The stacks of thylakoids found in chloroplasts are called grana. These structures are responsible for housing the light-absorbing pigments and protein complexes involved in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
A stack of thylakoids within the chloroplast is called GRANA
No, they are not. "Membranous sac" is a descriptive term that can refer to a number of different structures, whereas a chloroplast is a clearly defined organelle with a clearly defined function (photosynthesis) There are membranous sacs found inside chloroplasts that are called thylakoids, which form the grana (singular "granum"). The thylakoid membranes contain chlorophyll and other pigments to trap energy from incoming light.
That is the correct spelling of the botany term "chloroplasts" (plural). The chloroplasts, found mostly in the leaf cells of green plants, are where sunlight acts on chlorophyll to begin the process of photosynthesis.
The internal membrane of the chloroplast that is organized into flattened membranous sacs is called the thylakoid membrane. These membranes contain chlorophyll and other pigments involved in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
A stack of thylakoids inside the cholorplast of a plant cell. A stack of thylakoid membrane structure
chloroplast