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Describe Chloroplasts, Chromoplasts and Leucoplasts.​

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Answered by Anonymous
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Chromoplasts are very' similar to chloroplasts, but they do not contain the green pigment chlorophyll. Instead, they contain other pigments which give colour to flowers and to leaves during the fall. These other pigments absorb colours of light than chlorophyll. Leucoplasts are non-pigmented colourless plastids.

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Answered by Anonymous
1

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Chloroplasts are organelles that conduct photosynthesis, where the photosynthetic pigment chlorophyll captures the energy from sunlight, converts it, and stores it in the energy-storage molecules ATP and NADPH while freeing oxygen from water in plant and algal cells.

Chromoplasts are plastids, heterogeneous organelles responsible for pigment synthesis and storage in specific photosynthetic eukaryotes. It is thought that like all other plastids including chloroplasts and leucoplasts they are descended from symbiotic prokaryotes.

Leucoplasts are a category of plastid and as such are organelles found in plant cells. They are non-pigmented, in contrast to other plastids such as the chloroplast. Lacking photosynthetic pigments, leucoplasts are not green and are located in non-photosynthetic tissues of plants, such as roots, bulbs and seeds.

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