Most chloroplasts are in the interior cells in leaves, termed the
misspell, and the cells near the surface of green stems. Many leaf and stem epidermal cells lack chloroplasts. The epidermis is the outermost layer of cells on non-woody plant parts. A pair of guard cells surround each leaf stomata. Guard cells usually have chloroplasts. Cells in xylem and phloem tissue also usually lack chloroplasts. Xylem and phloem provide structural support and internal transport of water, minerals and organic compounds in plant organs.
Most underground plant cells lack chloroplasts because chloroplasts require light for their development. Thus, underground organs such as roots, bulbs,tubers, corms and rhizomes would generally lack chloroplasts. However, underground cells often have other kinds of plastids, such as amyloplasts, which store starch. Underground plant organs may develop some chloroplasts if exposed to light.
Window leaf plants have fleshy leaves that are buried in the soil with just the top showing above ground. The window leaves have many cells in the top center of the leaf that are transparent and let light reach the chloroplast-containing cells on the sides of the leaf. The transparent cells lack chloroplasts.
Parasitic plants, such as Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora) and dodder, lack chlorophyll so have no chloroplasts. White or yellow tissue in variegated-leaf plants also lack chloroplasts. Albino plants also lack chlorophyll. Many non-green flowers and fruits lack chloroplasts at maturity.
since chloroplast need sun most plants that grow underground lack chloroplast cells, for eg, onions although the bulb its self is underground the stem actually has chloroplast in it. Beets, carrots, patatoes also.
There are no plants that do not contain chloroplasts. There are plants that do not produce chlorophyll. One could argue that in these plants, it is no longer a chloroplast but a plastid or a leucoplast. That, however, is a matter of semantics.
Examples include the Indian Pipes (Monotropa) and squawroot.
Paracitic plants do not have.They are yellow in color.Ex-cuscuta.
There are hardly any plant cells without chloroplasts, so examples...no clue.
phloem. while xylem cells have no chloroplasts either they are dead cells.
Cells which do not expose to sunlight have not chloroplasts.Also paracitic plants lack chloroplast.
some parasitic and saprophytic plants
Cell wall, chlorplasts, and large vacuole.
Yes, plant cells contain a nucleus.
Plant Cell
Both animal and plant cells contain genetic material, DNA.
It is said that some plant sex cells contain a flagella.
No, only plant cells contain chloroplasts.
== == chlorplasts- for storing chlorphyl cell wall- for holding the plant up
Cell wall, chlorplasts, and large vacuole.
It doesn't eat algae it is a plant cell and therefore it produces its own food using the chlorplasts which contain chlorafill in order to photosynetheis
"calls" do not contain chloroplasts. However, if you mean cells, then any cell that undergoes photosynthesis has choloroplasts. This would include plant cells as well as some bacteria, archaebacteria, and protist cells.
the nucleus, cell membrane, cytoplasm, and in plant cells, the cell wall and chlorplasts
Yes, plant cells contain a nucleus.
im not sure... but i think it is the Chlorplasts or the mitochondria... go to google and search up "plant cell parts interactive". It will give u a detailed interactive map of a cell.
Plant cell.
Plant Cell
Generally root cells do not have chloroplasts.Thats because they don't expose to sunlight.
Cytoplasm