Chlorophyll make plants green.They are in chloroplasts.
A truly colorless thing would be invisible, or it would be perfectly transparent. There are no such plants. But plants that do not appear to be green can and do use photosynthesis.
No, ecologists study the interactions between organisms and their environment, including plants, animals, and microorganisms. While green plants are an important focus due to their role in ecosystems, ecologists also study a wide range of other organisms and factors that shape ecological communities.
i don't know... is there a genetic connection??? Im wondering the same thing. Is there a genetic connection? I concluded that there is not an genetic connection, that dark hair has dark eyes for example. But i do however thing that there is a environmental connection. Both hair and eye color is effected but the environment (sunny, not sunny)
Chloroplasts are the structures in plant cells that contain green pigment, specifically chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is a key pigment involved in photosynthesis, the process by which plants convert sunlight into energy.
Chlorophyll, the pigment present in plants, absorbs red and blue light, reflecting green light, which is why plants appear green. Animals, including humans, have pigments such as melanin that absorb some light and reflect others, determining the colors we see in their skin, hair, and eyes.
Most plants are green and the thing responsible for them being green is their chlorophyll (which is what is also responsible for photosynthesis). The fact that they are green means that they're not using that wavelength frequency. Red would be the best wavelength to get plants to photosynthezise and grow.
a green thing named chlorophyl. all of the green parts of plants like leaves have chlorophyl. chlorophyl is saved in chloroplast.
Green plants are not polluters. They absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen (a good thing), remove pollutants from air (a good thing), fix nitrogen into nitrates (a good thing)
The thing that says "ask" at the top
Not necessarily. While many plants are green due to chlorophyll, there are other organisms like algae and some bacteria that can also be green. So, being green does not always mean something is a plant.
There is no such thing as "emerold". However, the gemstone "emerald" is a deep green in colour.
yes because he might have some tipe of thing he might like that is green.
Plants are green because of something called chlorophyll, which is a chemical that allows plants to capture energy from the sun and turn it into food There are two types of chlorophyl. But the one that turns things green is chlorophyl A.
A truly colorless thing would be invisible, or it would be perfectly transparent. There are no such plants. But plants that do not appear to be green can and do use photosynthesis.
Contrasting and complimentary colours are the same thing. Green is a secondary colour. You achieved a secondary colour by mixing two of the three primary colour. In this case green is the mixture of Yellow and Blue. The complimentary colour to a secondary colour is the primary colour not used to create it; in this case the complimentary (or contrasting) colour to green is red.
There is no such thing as a green Alexandria bird. There is however, a Queen Alexandria's birdwing, which is the largest butterfly in the world and is blue and green in color.
Yes, green fruits have chloroplasts too. Chloroplasts are responsible for photosynthesis, which gives fruits their green color. However, as fruits ripen, chloroplasts may start to break down and transition to other types of plastids, leading to changes in color.