in the cells
Animals cells are in animals.
No, prokaryotic cells are bacteria and animal cells are eukaryotic (plants, fungi and animals are all eukaryotic).
No, prokaryotic cells are bacteria and plant cells are eukaryotic (plants, fungi and animals are all eukaryotic).
Pigment is located in special cells called chromatophores found in various layers of the skin of animals, such as melanocytes in vertebrates and chromatophores in cephalopods. These cells contain pigments that are responsible for giving animals their coloration and patterns.
In animals, cells are located throughout the body within tissues and organs. In plants, cells are present in various parts of the plant, including leaves, stems, roots, and flowers. Both animal and plant cells work together to carry out the functions necessary for the survival of the organism.
vacuoles are located in both plant and animal cells. True, but in animal cells you can't see as many because there are few and the few that there are, are small. In plants, there is a big vacuole, unlike in animal cells.
Yes animals have cells. All living things have cells.
Glycogen is stored primarily in the cells of the liver
there are cells in the animals hair
plant cells have a cell wall, animal cells don'tplant cells have chloroplasts, animals don'tanimal cells have cilia and flagellaplant cells have a central vacuole, animals only have a vacuole
Animals do not have chroplasts, chroplasts are located in plant cells. They aid in the turning of sunlight into energy.
Because all cells are roughly the same size. This means that bigger animals are made of more cells than smaller animals. (If bigger animals had the same number of cells as smaller animals then the cells they were made of would have to be bigger in proportion to those that smaller animals were made of - and they are not)