Chloroplast: Difference between revisions

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Other organisms that house chloroplasts and perform photosynthesis:
Other organisms that house chloroplasts and perform photosynthesis:
* [[algae]], mostly single-celled, members of the plant kingdom;
* [[algae]], mostly single-celled, members of the plant kingdom;
* [[diatoms]] and [[euglenids]], among the [[protist]]s, a mixed group of mostly single-celled [[Eukaryote|eukaryotic]] organisms that do not fall under the eukaryotic kingdoms of plants, fungi and animals.
* [[diatoms]], [[dinoflagellates]], and [[euglenids]], among the [[protist]]s, a mixed group of mostly single-celled [[Eukaryote|eukaryotic]] organisms that do not fall under the eukaryotic kingdoms of plants, fungi and animals.

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Most living cells of so-called higher plants contain a number of tokens of a type of plastid called chloroplasts, tiny, somewhat football-shaped, bacteria-sized organelles, a few micrometers in size, up to several hundred in number in specialized green cells, each chloroplast a separate compartmented structure whose boundary consists of two membranes, the interior of the inner membrane of which contains a semiliquid matrix, called stroma, suspending a system of membranes, called thylakoids, whose membranes embed molecules of chlorophyll and other pigments that absorb energy from sunlight, initiating the physico-chemical process of photosynthesis.

Other organisms that house chloroplasts and perform photosynthesis: