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2007-02-11 19:25:21 · 6 answers · asked by BMB 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

6 answers

they are found scattered in the cytoplasm of all plant cells that perform photosynthesis

2007-02-11 19:28:13 · answer #1 · answered by Sileg 2 · 0 0

This question could be answered in several ways:
1. In what organisms are chloroplasts found? Chloroplasts are in plants and some protists.
2. Which cells in plants have chloroplasts? Mostly in the mesophyll cells of the leaves, but also in the cortex of green stems and in the guard cells of the epidermis.
3. Where are chloroplasts inside the cells? Chloroplasts are scattered throughout the cytoplasm.

2007-02-11 19:31:10 · answer #2 · answered by ecolink 7 · 0 0

They are found in plant cells, exclusively (not in animal cells, that's why you can't go out in the sun and come home full after a couple hours). What do they do, well they have chlorophyll, green pigment well identifiable in leaves. We know chlorophyll traps sunlight for photosynthesis. Chloroplasts amplify that process on a cellular level, so cells can actually carry photosynthesis out, and when many cells do it, the whole leaf, then the whole plant feeds off of it

2007-02-11 21:55:41 · answer #3 · answered by Zhughu 2 · 0 0

In the cytoplasm of plant cells. That's why plants are green and do photosynthesis.

2007-02-11 19:30:43 · answer #4 · answered by Maeroc 2 · 0 0

In plant cells.

2007-02-11 19:35:56 · answer #5 · answered by birdwatcher 4 · 0 0

In plants.

2007-02-11 19:28:04 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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