Since fungus and plants are really symillar, i think so because a vacuole is just where the cell stores water and nutrients so it sould be manditory for every cell
The organelle that stores food is plants as well as fungi is the vacuole. A vacuole is enclosed and also stores the waste.
No, a vacuole is not a polysaccharide. Vacuoles are membrane-bound organelles found in the cells of plants, fungi, and some protists that store water, nutrients, and waste products. Polysaccharides, on the other hand, are complex carbohydrates made up of multiple sugar units bonded together.
A vacuole is a membrane-bound organelle found in the cells of plants, fungi, and some protists. It is typically a large, fluid-filled structure that serves various functions, such as storing nutrients, maintaining turgor pressure, and aiding in waste removal. Vacuoles can vary in size, shape, and content depending on the type of cell and its specific needs.
A specific type of vacuole, called a contractile vacuole expels excess water from many fresh water protists.
Tonoplast is the outer covering of vacuole
no it doesnt
vacuole
No because it is not really in animal and it doesnt really move
Cell wallPlastidslarge central vacuole.
The organelle that stores food is plants as well as fungi is the vacuole. A vacuole is enclosed and also stores the waste.
No, a vacuole is not a polysaccharide. Vacuoles are membrane-bound organelles found in the cells of plants, fungi, and some protists that store water, nutrients, and waste products. Polysaccharides, on the other hand, are complex carbohydrates made up of multiple sugar units bonded together.
They do not have green leaves because they are in the Fungi kingdom.
chloroplast and cell wall and a LARGE vacoule
A cellulose cell wall (note: bacteria and fungi cells both have cell walls, but not made of cellulose)A large permanent vacuole
A vacuole is a sac inside a cell that acts as a storage area. It stores nutrients, waste products, and other substances needed by the cell. Vacuoles can also help maintain the cell's shape and structure.
A vacuole is a membrane-bound organelle found in the cells of plants, fungi, and some protists. It is typically a large, fluid-filled structure that serves various functions, such as storing nutrients, maintaining turgor pressure, and aiding in waste removal. Vacuoles can vary in size, shape, and content depending on the type of cell and its specific needs.
plants are regular in shape and contains cell wall,chloroplast and also permanent large central vacuole but animals cells are irregular in shape,some has vacuoles which are known as temporary vacuole,but doesnt has any cell wall or chloroplast.