Yes plant are the only living organism which composed of rigid cellwall and this cellwall is made from cellelose
no nervous system no means of locomotion rigid cell walls
Plants with rigid cell walls are unable to do phagocytosis because this process involves cell engulfment of large particles, which is hindered by the rigidity of the cell wall. Diffusion, osmosis, and active transport can still occur in plants with rigid cell walls as these processes involve movement of particles across membranes.
Protozoa do not have rigid cell walls; instead, they possess flexible cell membranes. This allows them to change shape and move actively, which is essential for their survival and feeding. Some protozoa may have protective structures, like pellicles or shells, but these are not rigid cell walls like those found in plants or fungi.
a thick, rigid membrane of cellulose fiber.
Plants, fungi, bacteria, and some protists have cell walls. The composition and structure of cell walls can vary between different types of organisms.
They do not seem more rigid, they are more rigid! They both have cell walls. Many eubacteria, the bacteria you are most familiar with, have cell walls of peptidoglycan. Plants have cell walls made of interlocking cellulose.
Yes, plants have cell walls. Cell walls are rigid structures that surround plant cells, providing support and structure to the plant. The cell walls are primarily composed of cellulose, a complex carbohydrate.
Rigid cell walls and chlorophyll
no nervous system no means of locomotion rigid cell walls
Plants with rigid cell walls are unable to do phagocytosis because this process involves cell engulfment of large particles, which is hindered by the rigidity of the cell wall. Diffusion, osmosis, and active transport can still occur in plants with rigid cell walls as these processes involve movement of particles across membranes.
I guess you are doing your biology homework. Anyways plants. Only plants have cell walls while animals have no cell walls.
Some cells have cell walls (plants do, animals don't) to keep their rigid structure. They also prevent water loss.
Protozoa do not have rigid cell walls; instead, they possess flexible cell membranes. This allows them to change shape and move actively, which is essential for their survival and feeding. Some protozoa may have protective structures, like pellicles or shells, but these are not rigid cell walls like those found in plants or fungi.
a thick, rigid membrane of cellulose fiber.
The cell wall are partly why the plant cell keeps the plant rigid but it is also down to the vacuole in the middle of the plant cell which is mainly a bag of water that pushes the cytoplasm against the cell wall causing it to be rigid.
Plants, fungi, bacteria, and some protists have cell walls. The composition and structure of cell walls can vary between different types of organisms.
Fungi are eukaryotic heterotrophs with rigid cell walls and no chlorophyll.