Biology, asked by thithiksha, 7 months ago

mitochondria and chloroplast could exist as independent prokaryotic cells. justify?



please explain it for 5 marks n i want right answer.
pleaseee​

Answers

Answered by ItsSmartyPayal
0

\large\purple{\fbox{\fbox{\red{Answer}}}}

The advantage here is realized at the level of the mitochondria and chloroplast [20]. Eukaryotic cells have chloroplast and mitochondria that both are membrane bound organelles. Prokaryotic cells, for example, bacteria have not chloroplast and mitochondria.

✌️pls follow me and also mark as brainliest ✌️

❤️ Also Thanks Answer ❤️

Answered by akanshagarwal2005
1

Answer:

Chloroplasts are like tiny green factories within plant cells that help convert energy from sunlight into sugars, and they have many similarities to mitochondria. The evidence suggests that these chloroplast organelles were also once free-living bacteria

Similar questions