They are type of prokariyotes. So they do not have
No bacteria have chloroplasts. Plants have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts were originally cyanobacteria -- they are the results of an endosymbiosis between a cyanobacterium and a eukaryote.
The chloroplasts
Yes they are related. Chlorophylls are in chloroplasts
Plants and algae have chloroplasts in kingdom eukariya.Prokariyotes lacks chloroplasts in them.
No they do not. They are in chloroplasts.
This may not help out to much, but really animals are not in archabacteria. Animals are in the kingdom Animalia. Archabacteria contains unicellular organisms that live in the most extreme enviorments.
Yes
archabacteria
Archea are not eukariyotes.They have prokariyotic cells
Archabacteria
No bacteria have chloroplasts. Plants have chloroplasts. Chloroplasts were originally cyanobacteria -- they are the results of an endosymbiosis between a cyanobacterium and a eukaryote.
The chloroplasts
Yes they are related. Chlorophylls are in chloroplasts
Plants and algae have chloroplasts in kingdom eukariya.Prokariyotes lacks chloroplasts in them.
Roundworms, also known as nematodes, are neither eubacteria nor archaeobacteria. They are in their own phylum (nematoda) of the kingdom Animalia (animals).
The plural of chloroplast is chloroplasts. As in "these are the chloroplasts".
Yes, pea plants have chloroplasts.