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What are(is) the major(s) differences between onions and Anacharis plant cells? (What do anacharis cells have that onion cells lack and why?) Thanks alot. :)

2007-02-04 16:14:32 · 2 answers · asked by l3lackitty 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

(5)What are(is) the major(s) differences between onions and Anacharis plant cells? (What do anacharis cells have that onion cells lack and why?) Thanks alot. :)

2007-02-04 16:31:43 · update #1

2 answers

Anacharis cells have lots of chloroplasts in them, onion cells don't (no photosynthesis there).

Anacharis cells are far more structured, because the leaves are only two cells thick.

2007-02-05 01:40:33 · answer #1 · answered by floundering penguins 5 · 0 0

Most of these answers are incorrect. It is C. Both animal and plant cells have ribosomes that are made of proteins and seemingly float in the cytoplasm. Only plant cells have cell walls. Animal cells have a semipermeable membrane and that is it. If you look at a plant cell under a microscope you can test Osmosis by putting salt water on a plant and watching the cell membrane under the cell wall retract and become smaller while the cell wall remains where it was. Plant cells look square because they have a cell wall that remains strong and doesn't move. An animal cell is shaped more like a sphere because it has no cell wall to keep its shape it just has a cell membrane.

2016-05-24 13:51:55 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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