Yes, but there are some living things that don't.
Nearly all eukaryotic cells, including plants, contain Mitoochondria.
Chloroplasts in plant cells and mitochondria in animal cells contain their own mitochondria
It is in both plant and animal cells. It is needed for aerobic respiration
yes both animal and plant cells have mitochondria
Yes. All eukaryotic cells have mitochondria.
because the plant cell contains the mitochondria in order for the plant to be green
because plant cells are weaker than animal cells. they cant eat with a fork so need to eat using mitochondria
Nope. It is only in plant cells. The mitochondria is basically the same thing as a chloroplast, only it is found in animal cells. Plant Cell - Chloroplast Animal Cell - Mitochondria
Nearly all eukaryotic cells, including plants, contain Mitoochondria.
No, the animal counterpart to the Plant Cell chloroplast is the Mitochondria.
Mitochondria is found in both animal, plant, and fungal cells.
Yes. Mitochondria are membrane-bound organelles. Animal and plant cells are eukaryotes (that is, they contain membrane bound organelles). Only prokaryotes (which are mostly bacteria and don't contain membrane bound organelles) don't have mitochondria.