Chlorophyl is only found in plant cells because it gives the plants their color. An animal cell gets its color from the usual genes
Chlorophyll is found only in plant cells.
Chloroplasts are the organelles found only in plant cells that perform photosynthesis to produce food for the plant.
Chloroplasts are found exclusively in plant cells and are responsible for photosynthesis. Vacuoles, cell walls, and chlorophyll can also be found in plant cells.
The chloroplasts store pigments. They are found only in plant cells, not animal cells. They store chlorophyll and other pigments.
Chlorophyll is the green pigment found in chloroplasts. These are in charge of photosynthesis, and are therefore only found in plant cells. So basically, the answer to the question is: any cell which isn't a plant cell. (Eg. animal cells, human cells...any cells that aren't green.)
Chlorophyll is found only in plant cells.
The only chlorophyll i know of is the pigment found in plant cells
chloroplast
Chlorophyll is the only organelle that exists in plant cells and not animal cells.
Chloroplasts are the organelles found only in plant cells that perform photosynthesis to produce food for the plant.
Plants. :) It's the green stuff that helps with photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts are found exclusively in plant cells and are responsible for photosynthesis. Vacuoles, cell walls, and chlorophyll can also be found in plant cells.
Chloroplasts are found in plants leaves. They make the plant a green colour.
Only plant cells contain chlorophyll, the pigment responsible for gathering light energy to use for photosynthesis.
Chloroplasts along with cell walls can only be found in plant cells.
The chloroplasts store pigments. They are found only in plant cells, not animal cells. They store chlorophyll and other pigments.
Chloroplasts and cell walls are found only in plant cells and plant-like protists.