An animal cell's components are different from a plant cells'.
A plant cell has a cell wall, chloroplast, a bigger vacuole and it's cell membrane is hard to see.
Even though it has all the components found in an animal cell it has some extras(the ones i listed above).
Look for chloroplasts and cell wall, if it's a vegetal cell it's quite probable you will find them, otherwise they won't be present. In some plant cells you can also find large vacuoles, which the cell uses for water storage.
You would find a nucleolus in both plant and animal cells. The nucleolus is involved in the production of ribosomes, which are essential for protein synthesis in the cell.
Chloroplasts are only found in plant cells. If they were in animal cells, people would be green.
Vacuoles can be found in plant and animal cells. Plant cells have water vacuoles to maintain the water balance inside the cell. An example of a vacuole in animal cells would be found in adipose tissue. These cells have large vacuoles for storing fat molecules.
Plant cells are generally larger than animal cells, and both are significantly larger than bacterial cells. Plant cells have a rigid cell wall that provides structural support and allows them to grow larger than animal cells, which do not have cell walls. Bacterial cells are much smaller than both plant and animal cells.
YOu would look at the lines between the darker lines and find out if it is intwined with each other
Plant cells have a large vacuole, which the animal cells don't.
It is not possible to answer this without seeing 'the cell above'. - If it is a rigid shape, with a cell wall, large vacuole and little green organelles (chloroplasts) it is a plant cell - If it is an irregular 'fluid' shape, with no cell wall it is an animal cell
i think it's because the plant cell and the animal cell are the same
The food remnants in the coprolite would tell whether the animal was a carnivore, herbivore, or omnivore. A carnivore's dung would not contain plant matter and would likely have bone fragments. An herbivore's dung would probably have some amount of undigested plant fibers left in it. An omnivore's would probably have a combination of plant and animal remnants, unless it had only eaten one of those recently.
because it would either grow roots or leaves
it would be a plant
This would be a parasite.
Look for chloroplasts and cell wall, if it's a vegetal cell it's quite probable you will find them, otherwise they won't be present. In some plant cells you can also find large vacuoles, which the cell uses for water storage.
A plant cell has chloroplasts and a cell wall, which an animal cell doesn't have.
it isn't good, it would destroy the plant/animal.
The organelle that you would expect to find in a plant cell but not animal cell is the centrosomes.