I am a biologist rather than a botanist but I recall there actually being 3 tissue types in plants. This is probably best answered at
http://4e.plantphys.net/article.php?ch=t&id=19
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Two kinds of eukaryotes that have cell walls are plant cells and animal cells.
Plants have cell walls made of cellulose, providing support and structure to the plant cells. Animal cells do not have cell walls; instead, they have a cell membrane that surrounds the cell and controls what enters and exits.
Plant cell walls are composed of cellulose, a structural polysaccharide that provides rigidity and support to the cell.
Plant cell walls are made of carbohydrates like cellulose. Bacterial cell walls are made of peptidoglycan. Hope this helps!
cell walls
Fungal cell walls are primarily made of chitin, while plant cell walls are primarily made of cellulose. Fungal cell walls do not contain lignin, which is found in plant cell walls and provides rigidity. Additionally, fungal cell walls do not have chloroplasts like plant cell walls do.
Well plant cells are the cells with cell walls so plants have cell walls.
plant cells have cell walls
they protect the cell from damage. only plant calls have cell walls.
Plant cells have cell walls, animal cells don't have cell walls.
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.
plant cells and animal cells both have cell walls.
Only plant cells have walls
No only plant cells have cell walls.
Plant cells have cell walls, and animal cells do not.
No, there is no similarity in bacterial cell walls and plant cell walls. They are different morphologically and also in chemical composition; plant cell walls are made up of cellulose, whereas bacterial cell walls are made up of peptidoglycan (also known as murein).
Plant incorporate cellulose into their cell walls, which give them a rigid structure.