Bacteria do not have any organelles.
They are missing a vacuole.
No, bacteria does not have a single membrane covered organelle.
The lysosome is the organelle most likely to be missing from the cells of a leaf. The leaf cells have membranes, a wall, and chloroplast.
Ribosomes are found in all cells, including bacteria. Some people reserve the word "organelle" for subcellular structures that have a membrane around them, in which case bacteria contain no organelles at all. Other people are happy to call ribosomes organelles, in which case that is your answer.
Archaea
They are missing a vacuole.
No, bacteria does not have a single membrane covered organelle.
no
The lysosome is the organelle most likely to be missing from the cells of a leaf. The leaf cells have membranes, a wall, and chloroplast.
Bacteria
Well, the organelle that contributes to cell division is definetly, bacteria.
Ribosomes are found in all cells, including bacteria. Some people reserve the word "organelle" for subcellular structures that have a membrane around them, in which case bacteria contain no organelles at all. Other people are happy to call ribosomes organelles, in which case that is your answer.
Archaea
No. "Organelle" means "little organ". An organelle is like a little organ inside of a cell that does specific things to keep the cell alive.
No, bacteria do not have a membrane bound organelle and that dis-includes the Golgi Apparatus.
Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplast, an organelle found in plant cells as well as certain bacteria.
the eucaryotic cell organelle that resemble bacteria is MITOCHONDRIA