Nope. Chloroplasts are organelles found in plant cells (not the roots obviously) that carry out photosynthesis and create the energy the plant needs in order to survive. Chloroplasts do, however, co-exist with the plant cell's nucleus within the cytosol of the cell. Just remember, a chloroplast is an organelle and a nucleus is an organelle; they are separate.
Chloroplasts are located in the palisade cells of the plant.
Within these cells they are found within cytoplasm.
Chloroplasts are located in the cytoplasm of plant cells (and more commonly in the palisade cell layer).
yes. chloroplasts hold green pigments called chlorophyll and that makes the plant green and gives the plant its food
Of course they do not. They are in cytoplasm
Yes they are in chloroplasts. In chloroplasts.they are in thylakoid membranes.
Chlorophyll is not in nucleus.They are in chloroplast.
The chloroplasts
The chloroplasts are located within the cytoplasm
Chloroplasts are located in the palisade cells of the plant. Within these cells they are found within cytoplasm.
in the cytoplasm
The cell...
The chloroplasts
The chloroplasts are located within the cytoplasm
Chloroplasts are located in the palisade cells of the plant. Within these cells they are found within cytoplasm.
in the cytoplasm
The cell...
The chloroplasts
Chloroplasts are concentrated in the cell of the mesophyll. So mesophyll is your answer.
In the chloroplasts. -anonymous18_K
In the chloroplasts
Chlorophyll is located in plants, more specifically in the chloroplasts of plants. It is found in a solution within the chloroplasts called the "stroma"
chloroplasts located only on the upper surface of leaves
animal cell