It makes it green, but it is only in a plant cell. Animal cells do not have chlorophyll.
A cell that possesses chlorophyll is actually a plant cell (although some plant cells don't have chlorophyll). It usually contains a cell wall.
Glucose is not the answer. the answer is chlorophyll. chlorophyll is a pigment in the cell that uses the light from the sun to create glucose. chlorophyll is green.
Animal cells don't have chlorophyll.
Chlorophyll is in the cell structure called chloroplast.
The green part of a plant cell is chloroplast
it holds the chlorophyll
A leaf cell is good at its job because it contains chlorophyll. It is even better at its job when it is larger.
Chlorophyll absorbs light energy for photosynthesis. it's in Chloroplast and is what makes the leaves of the plant green.
No: Only a plant cell contains chlorophyll.
nope. there is only chlorophyll in a plant cell
the cell part of chlorophyll is fond in chloroplast
contains chlorophyll which does photosynthesis i.e. making energy from CO2 & water using light
no, chlorophyll is in the thylakoids, which is a organelle inside of the cell. it is what gives the plant cell its green color
A cell that possesses chlorophyll is actually a plant cell (although some plant cells don't have chlorophyll). It usually contains a cell wall.
The cell wall provides rigidity to the cell and the chlorophyll enables the cell to manufacture glucose though photosynthesis
Glucose is not the answer. the answer is chlorophyll. chlorophyll is a pigment in the cell that uses the light from the sun to create glucose. chlorophyll is green.
The cell wall & chlorophyll.