Organelles
Characteristics of Life
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration
More organelles
Microscopes
100

This organelle makes energy for the cell

Mitochondria

100

All living things have 1 or more:

Cells

100

The organelle where photosynthesis occurs

Chloroplast

100

This organelle breaks down cellular waste

Lysosome

100

If I use the 10x objective lens, what is my total magnification?

100x (10x objective x 10x ocular)

200

This organelle has a rough and smooth part

Endoplasmic reticulum

200

All living things pass on their genetic material to the next generation by this process

Reproduction

200

The organelle where cellular respiration occurs

Mitochondria

200

This organelle makes proteins

Ribosome

200

The glass that holds my specimen is called a

Slide

300

This organelle contains all the cell's genetic material

Nucleus

300
All living things ______ (like breathing, or doing this at the mitochondria)

Respire

300

The product(s) of photosynthesis are

Oxygen, and glucose

300

This organelle acts as the highways for the cell

Endoplasmic reticulum

300

The glass that covers my specimen to protect it is called a 

Coverslip

400

The organelle where proteins go to get packaged before being shipped out of the cell

Golgi apparatus

400

The term describing a change in the environment upon an organism

Stimuli (plural), Stimulus (singular)

400

The product(s) of cellular respiration are

Carbon dioxide, water, and energy (ATP)

400

This organelle acts as the brain of the cell

Nucleus

400

I hold these two parts when carrying the microscope

The arm and base

500

The organelle only found in plant cells and prokaryotic cells

Cell wall

500

The term used to describe an organism's ability to maintain a stable internal state 

Homeostasis

500

What is needed for photosynthesis to occur?

Sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide
500

This organelle regulates what travels into and out of the cell

Cell membrane

500

This is what the diagram of the circle I see when I look into the microscope is called

Field of View