The thylakoid membrane of green plants contains 6 different pigments:
Carotene - an orange pigment
Xanthophyll - a yellow pigment
Phaeophytin a - a gray-brown pigment
Phaeophytin b - a yellow-brown pigment
Chlorophyll a - a blue-green pigment
Chlorophyll b- a yellow-green pigment
Chlorophyll a is the most common of these 6 pigments (present in all photosynthetic plants).
chlorophyll
No, mitochondria do not have thylakoids. Thylakoids are a membrane system containing chlorophyll found in chloroplasts, while mitochondria have inner and outer membranes but do not contain thylakoids. Mitochondria are involved in cellular respiration, not photosynthesis like chloroplasts.
Yes, a granum is a stack of thylakoid discs found in the chloroplast of plant cells. Thylakoids are membrane-bound compartments where photosynthesis takes place, and they contain chlorophyll molecules that capture light energy for the production of chemical energy.
These are thylakoids, which contain chlorophyll and are the sites of photosynthesis in chloroplasts. Thylakoids are arranged in stacks known as grana, where light reactions of photosynthesis occur.
The organelle that contains thylakoids and chlorophyll is the chloroplast. Thylakoids are membranous structures within the chloroplast where the chlorophyll is located, and they play a key role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
Thylakoids contain chlorophyll.
chlorophyll
chlorplast contain thylakoids unlike mitochondria
No, mitochondria do not have thylakoids. Thylakoids are a membrane system containing chlorophyll found in chloroplasts, while mitochondria have inner and outer membranes but do not contain thylakoids. Mitochondria are involved in cellular respiration, not photosynthesis like chloroplasts.
Yes, a granum is a stack of thylakoid discs found in the chloroplast of plant cells. Thylakoids are membrane-bound compartments where photosynthesis takes place, and they contain chlorophyll molecules that capture light energy for the production of chemical energy.
Thylakoids(apex)
thylakoids
These are thylakoids, which contain chlorophyll and are the sites of photosynthesis in chloroplasts. Thylakoids are arranged in stacks known as grana, where light reactions of photosynthesis occur.
The organelle that contains thylakoids and chlorophyll is the chloroplast. Thylakoids are membranous structures within the chloroplast where the chlorophyll is located, and they play a key role in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis.
The thylakoids of a chloroplast contain the phytosynthetic pigments, such as chlorophyll.
Chloroplasts contain bundles of thylakoids in most plant cells.
The disk-shaped sacs suspended in the stroma are called thylakoids. They contain the chlorophyll pigment and are the sites where light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis take place. Thylakoids are interconnected to form grana, which are stacks of thylakoids found in chloroplasts.