There aren't any (you're not a plant);
The closest relative would be the mitochondria.
Human are chemo heterotrophs.We do not have chloroplasts.
Yes, chloroplasts can be compared to the human body's organ in terms of their function. Just like organs perform specific tasks within the body, chloroplasts are specialized organelles within plant cells that carry out photosynthesis, converting light energy into sugars for the plant's survival.
If a plant cell lacked chloroplasts, then it would compare to "a human without a heart"
No, human skin cells do not contain chloroplasts. Chloroplasts are found in plant cells and algae, where they are responsible for photosynthesis. Human skin cells do not photosynthesize and do not contain chloroplasts.
The chloroplasts in plant cells share a similar role to the mitochondria in that they both function as the powerhouse of the cell by producing energy through cellular respiration (for mitochondria) and photosynthesis (for chloroplasts).
No, chloroplasts are not found in the human body. Chloroplasts are specialized organelles found in plant cells and other autotrophic organisms that are responsible for photosynthesis, converting sunlight into energy. Humans do not have the ability to photosynthesize and therefore do not possess chloroplasts.
Human cheek cells don't have chloroplasts because chloroplasts are what plants use to create food from sunlight. We don't create food from sunlight.
The body would die.
Chloroplasts are only found in plant cells and it performs photosynthesis.
They do nothing in human.There are no chloroplasts.
No. chloroplasts cannot be injected in humans as humans do nothave the apparatus then can sustain chloroplasts.
cockroaches can not grow to the size of an human body that would be immposible