Onion are under the soil.So they do not get sunlight for photosynthesis
yes
No, you cannot observe chloroplasts in onion cells because onion cells do not contain chloroplasts. Onions belong to a group of plants known as monocots, which typically lack chloroplasts in their cells. Chloroplasts are mostly found in the cells of green plants that undergo photosynthesis.
Onion bulb does not have chloroplasts.Onion leaves have chloroplasts.
A microscope is the best tool for a student to use to observe mitosis in an onion root tip.
Onion cells do not have chloroplasts because the onion is underground where there is no light. Without light chloroplasts have no purpose, so onion cells just don't have them.
Onion leaves have chloroplast but not the vegetable(bulb)....
yes
No, you cannot observe chloroplasts in onion cells because onion cells do not contain chloroplasts. Onions belong to a group of plants known as monocots, which typically lack chloroplasts in their cells. Chloroplasts are mostly found in the cells of green plants that undergo photosynthesis.
Onion bulb does not have chloroplasts.Onion leaves have chloroplasts.
yes it can, if its a plant, then it has chloroplasts
the chloroplast
no
Chloroplasts can be seen in Elodea leaf cells but not in the epidermal cells of onion cells. Chloroplasts are responsible for photosynthesis in plant cells, containing chlorophyll that captures sunlight for energy production. Onion epidermal cells do not contain chloroplasts as they do not perform photosynthesis.
yes because all plant cell have it
A microscope is the best tool for a student to use to observe mitosis in an onion root tip.
Onion cells do not have chloroplasts because the onion is underground where there is no light. Without light chloroplasts have no purpose, so onion cells just don't have them.
No. Because an onion develops in the ground, and chloroplasts develop in the sunlight. Therefore no chloroplasts form.