it is ribinspons and gaint manolis
The term "plastid" was introduced by German botanist Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper in 1885. Plastids were initially thought to be independent organisms but are now known to be organelles found in plant cells.
Mainly in eukaryotic cells and (though originally thought not to have any) now proven, some in prokaryotic cells as well. (:
Organelles are found in the cytoplasm of cells.
Eukaryotic cells have organelles.
Animal cells use organelles (so do plant cells). Cells with organelles are called "eukaryotic" which means these are cells that have a nucleus (which is one of the organelles).
Organelles are found in the cytoplasm of cells.
yes animal cells and plant cells do have organelles
No, organelles are not independent life forms in humans. They are specialized structures within cells that carry out specific functions necessary for cell survival. Each organelle works together to maintain the cell's overall function and is dependent on the cell for survival.
Yes, bacteria do not have organelles within their cells. They are prokaryotic cells, which means they lack membrane-bound organelles found in eukaryotic cells.
Every cell has organelles. Prokaryotes were once thought to have no organelles but some have been found now. Eukaryotes have membrane bound organelles and prokaryotes do not.
Mitochondria are considered to be eukaryotic organelles. They have their own DNA and ribosomes, and are thought to have evolved from engulfed prokaryotic cells in a symbiotic relationship with eukaryotic cells.
Eukaryotic cells contain membrane bound compartments, prokaryotic cells don't. Membrane bound compartments form organelles. Prokaryotes are a group of organisms made up of both bacteria and archaea, which you may not have studied- they used to be known as archaeabacteria as people thought they were a kind of bacteria, but current scientific opinion is that they're separate. So... no, it's not only bacteria that don't have organelles, archaea don't either.