Hornworts
plant cells
Not every plant cell has chloroplast. For example, onion plant cells don't. Even in green plants, chloroplasts are not in each cell, only in ones that receive sunlight.
Plant cells contain the following structures: cell wall, chloroplasts, vacuole, nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, and golgi apparatus.
The only place photosynthesis happens is in the chloroplast. Each plant or algae contains about 10 to 100 chloroplast.
Within the plant cells (usually leaf cells), the cytoplasm contains organelles called chloroplasts where photosynthesis takes place. Each chloroplast contains stacks of structures called thylakoids, which contain the chlorophyll.
Some plants are not green because each plant has pigments that use to trap different wavelengths. For example, each plant contains chloroplast that traps light energy. The chloroplast contains chlorophyll, which are the green pigment that absorb the energy of the sun.
There are no cells IN cells, each cell is a separate entity be it a plant cell or an animal cell.
The plant cell is the only cell!! If you are talking about how many organelles, I will tell you the major one: Nucleus, Nucleolus, Cytoplasm, Mitochondria, E.R., Nuclear Membrane, Cell Membrane, Cell Wall, Chloroplast, Ribosomes, Golgi Bodies, vacuole.
Chloroplast and Mitochondria. A chloroplast harvests solar energy and stores it in organic molecules during photosynthesis. Each mitochondrion releases stored energy.
Vesicles form along the midline of plat cells during mitosis and join in line to form a plate that is part of the two daughter cells cell wall. Then they split apart to form the finished cell wall for each of the daughter cells.
Ferns are considered vascular seedless plants. Well, they are seedless, but they do have spores.
There are two distinct organelles. They are mitochondria and chloroplast