Biology, asked by samriddhi99, 10 months ago

purpose of vacuole in a cell?
why are they bigger in plants?​

Answers

Answered by nupurkandu
1

Explanation:

Plant cell vacuoles serve the same vital storage functions for nutrients, water and wastes as those in animal cells but are much larger because they also provide structural stiffness in combination with the plant's cell walls. This is why water-starved plants droop; their cells have essentially deflated.

Answered by tiwary2411
0

Answer:

Plant cell vacuoles serve the same vital storage functions for nutrients, water and wastes as those in animal cells but are much larger because they also provide structural stiffness in combination with the plant's cell walls. This is why water-starved plants droop; their cells have essentially deflated.

Similar questions