Well thylakoids organize chloraphyll and other pigments within the membrane of the thylakoid. Chloraphyll is a green pigment so that affects the pigment of the thylakoid.
I hope that helps .
Most likely chlorophyll (but not always) and it will be green.
No, blue-green bacteria do not have chloroplasts. Instead, they contain specialized structures called thylakoids where the photosynthetic pigments, including chlorophyll, are located. These thylakoids are involved in the process of photosynthesis in blue-green bacteria.
granum are stacks of thylakoids. grana are several stacks of thylakoids. :)
Cells contain chloroplast which is analogous to the mitochondria in animal cells. Within these chloroplast are structures called thylakoids. these thylakoids contain pigments which are used to get the light from the sun involved in photosynthesis. In most green plants the primary pigment is one form or another of chlorophyll.
granum are stacks of thylakoids. grana are several stacks of thylakoids. :)
Most likely chlorophyll (but not always) and it will be green.
No, blue-green bacteria do not have chloroplasts. Instead, they contain specialized structures called thylakoids where the photosynthetic pigments, including chlorophyll, are located. These thylakoids are involved in the process of photosynthesis in blue-green bacteria.
PS1 (Photosystem 1) is located on the stroma thylakoids: the thylakoids floating around in the stroma. PS2 is located on the grana thylakoids, those thylakoids organized into stacks called grana!
They are located in the thylakoids, which are in chloroplasts in the mesophyll cells of a leaf. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chlorophyll is green therefore it is located in the green parts of a plant.
Thylakoids contain chlorophyll.
In the thylakoids are proteins that
its found in the little green chloroplast.
Chloroplasts contain membranes called thylakoids. Thylakoids are flattened and arranged in stacks called grana. The space between the grana is called the stroma. Chlorophyll is the green substance in the thylakoids which gathers light for photosynthesis.
no, chlorophyll is in the thylakoids, which is a organelle inside of the cell. it is what gives the plant cell its green color
No, mitochondria do not have thylakoids. Thylakoids are a membrane system containing chlorophyll found in chloroplasts, while mitochondria have inner and outer membranes but do not contain thylakoids. Mitochondria are involved in cellular respiration, not photosynthesis like chloroplasts.
granum are stacks of thylakoids. grana are several stacks of thylakoids. :)
Thylakoids are the site of the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.