You tell me and we'll both know! :)
I don't know, except for the fact that they wouldn't taste very good in a salad. Why don't you look this up on a scientific website instead of pining for answers on Ask.com? That's pathetic.
Ribosomes look like granes of sand
Both play part in allowing gases in and out, esp carbon dioxide which is needed for photosynthesis. Stoma, by being a pore; Guard cell, by opening (becoming turgid) and closing (become flaccid) when necessary. They are also both necessary for the leaf's survival.
the DNA
tu puta madre!
The guard cell of stomata look like a balloon when it is turgid. Two such cells form the pore of the stomata. When both guard cells of a stomata are deflated by exo-osmosis the stomatal pore is closed.
I don't know, except for the fact that they wouldn't taste very good in a salad. Why don't you look this up on a scientific website instead of pining for answers on Ask.com? That's pathetic.
they look like seeds
It is a green looking cell.
It is often labeled as x^2 , or x2.
It looks like a cell that is pineapple coloured
A White Blood Cell looks like Sperm!
Ribosomes look like granes of sand
Both play part in allowing gases in and out, esp carbon dioxide which is needed for photosynthesis. Stoma, by being a pore; Guard cell, by opening (becoming turgid) and closing (become flaccid) when necessary. They are also both necessary for the leaf's survival.
A bee guard for a hummingbird feeder looks like a trough of water. The trough looks like a circle around the top of the feeder.
depends on what the organism is that your trying to look at
A skin cell looks a lot like a frosted flake. its flat and dry and if a bunch of them are looked at under a microscope they look like a desert