Biology, asked by ayini88361, 10 months ago

State four structural features, present in a photosynthesising plant cell, that make it different from the bacterial cell.

Answers

Answered by james86
27

Answer:

plants undergoing photosynthesis is different from bacterial cell in many ways.

Explanation:

THE DIFFERENCES ARE :

  • plants have pigment called cholorophyll which is essential for plants and it is not present in bacteria cell.
  • plants use sunlight, water CO2 as their raw materials. whereas bacterias prepare food from chemicals inside their bodies and need no raw materials.
  • plant cell walls are made of cellulose. Whereas bacterial walls made of chitin and other chemicals.
  • plants are photoautotrophs and bacterias re chemi autotrophs

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Answered by Brainzeee
2

Explanation:

Plant structural features of photosynthesis are different from bacterial structural features in the following ways:

  • There are structural features like stomata, chlorophyll, cellulose, etc. which are different from the bacterial structural features.
  • Plants contain cellulose in their cell wall, which keep the plant's cells stable, while bacteria contain chitin and other chemicals containing the cell wall.
  • Chlorophyll pigment is present in the plant, which is the primary photosynthetic pigment and used to absorb red light and blue light and reflect green light. While chlorophyll is not present in bacteria.
  • Plants are photoautotrophs, meaning they synthesize their own food using sunlight and carbon dioxide, while bacteria are chemoautotrophs, meaning they gain energy by oxidizing the electron donors.
  • Plants use sunlight, carbon dioxide and water as raw material to form energy, while bacteria break down chemical compounds to obtain energy.

To learn more about general structure of bacteria,

https://brainly.in/question/820938

To learn more about function of stomata in photosynthesis,

https://brainly.in/question/1434549

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