Plants do their energy manufacturing in the cells during photosynthesis, this includes O2 intake. Plants don't need redblood cells because, for them, oxygen comes from the air, so to speak, not from a discreet organ (lungs for example) as with many higher animals.
Water needs to reach every cell in the plant- in a similar way to our blood needing to reach every cell in our body. capillary action draws water up the plant stem, and into the smaller channels in the leafs.
a plant and cells
Because cells need the amino acids to produce proteins.
Oxygen
mitochondria Its the chloroplast, all the mitochondria does is produce the cell's energy
The cell wall works to hold the plant cell in a rectangular shape. Plants don't have bones so they need the cell wall to hold the plant up.
Cell wall
water and sunlight
Because plant cells need the proteins to live.
The vacuoles in a cell hold water for the cell
Plant cells have a cell wall made of cellulose, while fungal cells have a cell wall made of chitin. Plant cells contain chloroplasts for photosynthesis, while fungal cells do not. Fungal cells can have multiple nuclei, while plant cells typically have a single nucleus.
Not every plant cell is photosynthetic. Energy is needed by every cell