These three ingredients are required for photosynthesis.
What are light (energy), water, and carbon dioxide?
This organelle is responsible for controlling the functions of the cell.
What is the nucleus?
The process of cell division.
The purpose of flagella and cilia.
What is for movement?
True or false: In diffusion, a solute flows from a low concentrated to a high concentrated area.
False: In diffusion, solute flows from a high concentration to a low concentration.
These two ingredients are required for cellular respiration.
What are oxygen and sugar?
This organelle is only present in plant and bacteria cells.
What is a cell wall?
This is the number of phases that make up mitosis.
What is four?
The organelle that allows a Euglena to "see".
When we put a cell into a hypotonic solution, this happens.
What is the cell explodes or enlarges?
This kind of cell does not have a cell wall.
What is an animal cell?
This organelle is the site of photosynthesis.
What is the chloroplast?
This is the type of reproduction that occurs during mitosis.
What is asexual?
This allows an amoeba to engulf its food.
What are pseudopods?
When a cell is put into a hypertonic solution, this happens to the cell.
What is shrinks or shrivels up?
The difference between prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
What is prokaryotes do NOT have a membrane-bound nucleus and eukaryotes do?
An infected cell is unable to package and sort proteins. This organelle must be damaged.
What is the Golgi apparatus?
True or False: Cytokinesis is included in the phases of mitosis.
What is false?
The word for when a Euglena moves toward a light.
What is phototaxis?
The diffusion of water.
What is osmosis?
The process during which DNA of a cell is replicated.
What is interphase?
A cell is unable to maintain homeostasis. It cannot create enough ATP to sustain life. This organelle must be damaged.
What is the mitochondria?
The phase during which chromosomes line up in a row.
What is metaphase?
Two organelles that unicellular and multicellular organisms have in common.
What are cytoplasm, ribosomes, and cell membrane?
Transport that does not require energy.
What is passive transport?