English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

3 answers

Plant cells divide by a cell plate the forms in the middle of the two dividing cells and grows from the inside out, which spits them. The cell plate is made of the same stuff the cell wall is made of, so when the cell plate is done splitting them in half, you have two complete, new plant cells.

2007-02-04 05:52:10 · answer #1 · answered by abacus314 3 · 0 0

Plant cells have the two a cellular wall produced from inflexible cellulose and a cellular mbn that clings on the brink of this inflexible cellular wall, so plant cellular should be waiting to divide the two those on the comparable time to divide the cellular contents for the hot cells. Cleavage is the pinching in of basically the pliable cellular mbn of animal cells, corresponding to what occurs to cellular membranes for the duration of endo and exocytosis of lively delivery like phagocytosis & pinocytosis. for the duration of telophase of mitosis in flora the cellular wall-cellular mbn complicated AND cytoplasm might prefer to be divided in a million/2 to make the two new plant cells. however the inflexible cellular wall + cellular mbn complicated is merely too THICK and "in the way" of the cellular membrane's std cleavage mechanism, so the plant cellular's cellular plate (sluggish production and depositing of a cellulose cellular divider in the middle) is the alternative mechanism nature designed and the plant DNA codes for.

2016-12-13 08:39:45 · answer #2 · answered by hume 4 · 0 0

in animal cells the cytoplasm pinches to create a cleavage furrow. in plant cells a new cell wall starts to form between the two splitting halves of the cell.

2007-02-04 08:33:27 · answer #3 · answered by michelle 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers