a small, double-membraned organelle of plant cells and certain protists, occurring in several varieties, as the chloroplast, and containing ribosomes, prokaryotic DNA, and, often, pigment.
by Garrett david cron
The most familiar plastid is the chloroplast, which is responsible for photosynthesis in plant cells. It contains chlorophyll, a green pigment that captures sunlight to convert into energy for the plant.
A colorless plastid that stores starch is called a leucoplast. Leucoplasts are responsible for starch storage in plant cells and do not contain pigments like chlorophyll, hence they appear colorless.
leucoplast
Plastid
A plastid is like a specialized tool in a Swiss Army knife, with different types (like chloroplasts and chromoplasts) serving specific functions within a cell, similar to how different tools on a Swiss Army knife serve specific purposes.
Animals cells do not have plastid but plants do.
All chloroplasts are plastids because chloroplasts are plastids containing chlorophyll. But, all plastids are not chloroplasts because only those plastid that contains chlorophyll are chloroplasts.
in a cell ofcourse
yes
The plastid is found in the cytoplasm, which is outside the nucleus. It is a specialized structure where starch, oils, proteins or pigments are stored.
Plastid
chloroplasts
Amyloplasts! :)
I don't no
chloroplasts, chromoplasts, and leucoplasts
The answer is plastids.
plastid