The palisade cells of plants would contain the most chlorophyll. The palisades are the primary site of photosynthesis in the leaves.
The lysosome is the organelle most likely to be missing from the cells of a leaf. The leaf cells have membranes, a wall, and chloroplast.
There wouldn't be a place in a cell. A cell is wide open and it doesn't have corners and nooks or whatever. So the place where you would find most chloroplast in a cell would be all over the place.
Cells with the most chlorophyll would be found in the mesophyll layer of the leaf, particularly in the palisade mesophyll cells. These cells are specialized for photosynthesis and contain a large number of chloroplasts, which is where chlorophyll is located.
Yes, all plant cells have chloroplasts. Plant cells are the only cells that have chloroplasts, actually. No- Most Cells of Plant Roots do not!
The leaf because it is the major structure for photosynthesis in a plant.
In the cells leaf
The leaves
Mostly in the leaves . That is because they get lot of light
Skın cells
Green because they have chloroplast
In Very active cells like skeletal muscle cells,cardiac muscle cells
False
The muscle cell
The lysosome is the organelle most likely to be missing from the cells of a leaf. The leaf cells have membranes, a wall, and chloroplast.
There wouldn't be a place in a cell. A cell is wide open and it doesn't have corners and nooks or whatever. So the place where you would find most chloroplast in a cell would be all over the place.
Cells with the most chlorophyll would be found in the mesophyll layer of the leaf, particularly in the palisade mesophyll cells. These cells are specialized for photosynthesis and contain a large number of chloroplasts, which is where chlorophyll is located.
The most familiar plastid is the chloroplast, which is responsible for photosynthesis in plant cells. It contains chlorophyll, a green pigment that captures sunlight to convert into energy for the plant.