Vacuole
The MITOCHONDRIA provides energy for both the plant and animal cell.
Starch grains are primarily found in plant cells, where they serve as a form of energy storage. Animals do not store energy as starch; instead, they primarily store energy in the form of glycogen. While some animal cells can contain small amounts of starch due to dietary intake or specific metabolic processes, it is not a typical characteristic of animal cells. Therefore, starch grains are not present in both animal and plant cells.
animal cell
Plant cells typically have large central vacuoles that store water, nutrients, and waste products, helping to maintain turgor pressure and structural integrity. In contrast, animal cells contain smaller vacuoles that serve similar functions but are less prominent. Additionally, plant cells store energy as starch, while animal cells primarily store energy as glycogen. Both cell types also have organelles like lysosomes for waste processing and storage.
The mitochondria is responsible for transforming energy in both plant and animal cells. It produces ATP through cellular respiration, utilizing nutrients and oxygen to generate energy for the cell's activities.
Mitochondrions store power in animal cells for later use. However, plants have chloroplasts to store energy.
The MITOCHONDRIA provides energy for both the plant and animal cell.
The MITOCHONDRIA provides energy for both the plant and animal cell.
Starch grains are primarily found in plant cells, where they serve as a form of energy storage. Animals do not store energy as starch; instead, they primarily store energy in the form of glycogen. While some animal cells can contain small amounts of starch due to dietary intake or specific metabolic processes, it is not a typical characteristic of animal cells. Therefore, starch grains are not present in both animal and plant cells.
In plant cells, substances like water, nutrients, and waste are stored in vacuoles. Animal cells store substances in various organelles such as the nucleus (DNA), mitochondria (energy), lysosomes (enzymes), and lipid droplets (lipids). Additionally, animal cells can store glycogen as an energy reserve in the cytoplasm.
Yes, both plant and animal cells have mitochondria.
animal cell
Mitochondria are found in animal cells. The plant equivalent of this "energy factory" is the chloroplast.
The organelles in eukaryotic (plant &animal) cells that converts food into usable energy are the Mitochondrion (plural of Mitochondria)
Mitochondria.
They both have mitochondria
yes they both need energy to survive because they are eukaryotes