Science, asked by cyansus09, 4 months ago

what are the cells found in a plant?

Answers

Answered by mcchaturvedi98933891
1

Answer:

Plant cells are eukaryotic, which means that they contain a distinct nucleus. Plant cells have three unique structures which set them apart from other eukaryotes, such as animal cells: the cell wall, plastids, and vacuoles. Plant cells are microscopic in size (on the order of 0.01 to 1.0 mm.)

Plant cells are eukaryotic, which means that they contain a distinct nucleus. Plant cells have three unique structures which set them apart from other eukaryotes, such as animal cells: the cell wall, plastids, and vacuoles. Plant cells are microscopic in size (on the order of 0.01 to 1.0 mm.)Explanation:

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Answered by llToxicNikll
6

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Plants have eukaryotic cells with large central vacuoles, cell walls containing cellulose, and plastids such as chloroplasts and chromoplasts. Different types of plant cells include parenchymal, collenchymal, and sclerenchymal cells. The three types differ in structure and function.

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