Yes, plants have cell membranes. Plant cells differ from animal cells in that plant cells also have cell walls.
Plant cells do have cell membranes, which are covered by the cell walls.
Yes. Like plants they have both cell membranes and cell walls (but the cell walls have a different composition).
No, cell walls are only found in plants. Both plants and animals, however, have cell membranes.
Cell membranes control what passes in and out of the cell. The cell membrane functions this way in both plant and animal cells.-Chocolate391
Yes, the cells of archaebacteria, bacteria, protists, fungi, plants and animals all have cell membranes. (Viruses have protein coats, not cell membranes and thus are not true 'cells'.) Thus indeed, all cells possess a cell membrane.
Plants have cell membranes just inside their cell walls. The cell membranes control what passes into and out of the cell.
Plant cells do have cell membranes, which are covered by the cell walls.
Yes. Like plants they have both cell membranes and cell walls (but the cell walls have a different composition).
*
yes
No, cell walls are only found in plants. Both plants and animals, however, have cell membranes.
Yes, an onion is a plant and plants have cell membranes and cell walls
Cell membranes control what passes in and out of the cell. The cell membrane functions this way in both plant and animal cells.-Chocolate391
The cell membrane still envelops the cell itself. It is inside of the cell wall.
Yes, plants have both cell walls (outside) and cell membranes (inside).
Yes, the cells of archaebacteria, bacteria, protists, fungi, plants and animals all have cell membranes. (Viruses have protein coats, not cell membranes and thus are not true 'cells'.) Thus indeed, all cells possess a cell membrane.
The cell wall is what plants have that are relatively analogous to the membranes that animals have.