Cytoplasm is not inherently dark green. The color of cytoplasm can vary in different cells and organisms due to the presence of pigments, organelles, or other cellular components that may be green in color. Some cells may appear dark green due to the presence of chloroplasts containing green pigment chlorophyll.
The everyday object that can be compared to cytoplasm would be the floor of a house. This is because the floor holds the houses furniture.
The nucleus should be red, mitochondria yellow, endoplasmic reticulum light blue, Golgi apparatus green, lysosomes orange, cytoplasm light yellow, and cell membrane dark blue.
they are located (in a plant cell) anywhere, not just in one place
this is not a trick question it just needs thought a dark green leaf would have more chlorophyll because chlorophyll is the substance that causes the leaf to turn green
The color ivy is a dark shade of green that is similar to the color of leaves on an ivy plant. It is typically a deep, rich green hue with hints of blue or black undertones.
a green crayon cause when you color with it it makes it green and cytoplasm makes the stem green.
No it is hyaline. Chlorophyll in chloroplasts make plants green
Plants.
chloroplasts
clear , maybe a bit green bc of cytoplasm
yellow and blue and a little bit of black or green and dark blue or green and black
Chlorophyll in chloroplast.
dark blue and green
chloroplasts
Chloroplasts
Chloroplast
vert foncé - dark green