Cell walls
animal plant fungi Protists Bacteria
Plant cells have a cell wall,which forms a shape for the cell.=As for the animal cell,they do not have a cell wall which enables them to have a undefined shape. Also this helps the structure of the cell to keep strong. This structure is stronger and a plant cell needs all the extra protection it can get.=
Both animal cells and bacterium cells have ribosomes, and mesosome. And the cell shape is similar in both typical animal cells and typical bacterium cells. This is not always the case though.
the similariti between yeast and bacteria is that : 1.both are single celled micro-organisms 2.both can suvive under all types of environment. 3.both live in groups. 4.they are very useful to human life. 5.both produce CO(2) gas during respiration. etc...
Collapse of a walled cell's cytoplasm due to the lack of water.Plasmolysis= contraction of the protoplast of a plant cell as a result of loss of water from the cell.plasmolysis- is the separation of plant cell cytoplasm from the cell wall as a result of water loss.cytolysis-the bursting or rupturing of cell membrane when the cell can no longer contain the excessive inflow of water (or extracellular fluid).
yesOf course plant cells are photosynthetic. But not all are photosynthetic,only light touching cells are photosynthetic
No, for example, onion plant cells don't. Even in green plants, chloroplasts are not in each cell, only in ones that receive sunlight. The presence of chloroplasts (green color) in the cells of a plant are an indicator of whether or not those cells are photosynthetic. Almost all terestrial plants are photosynthetic, but that does not mean that all of a single plant's cells are photosynthetic as described above. Photosynthetic cells are specialized to make sugar for the plant's energy needs from atmospheric carbon dioxide. The cells in other parts of the plant have other specialized functions.
Plant cells have chloroplasts. They have glyoxisomes and photosynthetic
They are in photosynthetic cells.They are in eukariyotes.
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No, for example, onion plant cells don't. Even in green plants, chloroplasts are not in each cell, only in ones that receive sunlight. The presence of chloroplasts (green color) in the cells of a plant are an indicator of whether or not those cells are photosynthetic. Almost all terestrial plants are photosynthetic, but that does not mean that all of a single plant's cells are photosynthetic as described above. Photosynthetic cells are specialized to make sugar for the plant's energy needs from atmospheric carbon dioxide. The cells in other parts of the plant have other specialized functions.
A cell wall made of cellulose, hemicellulose and pectin is one of the unique features of plant cells. They also contain chloroplasts, which are photosynthetic organelles (that are not found in animal cells).
No, bacteria generally do not have chloroplasts to begin with. Photosynthetic bacteria contain bacteriochlorophyll, which is similar to the chlorophyll found in plant cells that allow photosynthesis to take place. One distinct phylum of photosynthetic bacteria, known as cyanobacteria, are thought to be the ancestor organisms that eventually evolved into the chloroplasts that are found in modern plants.
Animal and fungi are not photosynthetic. So plant is the answer
They are photosynthetic creatures. They are neither plant nor animal.
Green plants contain them. You can find them in plant cells.