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Cells under the Microscope

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Presentation on theme: "Cells under the Microscope"— Presentation transcript:

1 Cells under the Microscope
A quick review

2 1. Are these plant or animal cells?
These are plant cells!

3 2. What organelle is the arrow pointing at?
Chloroplasts * Photosynthesis takes place inside his organelle Without chloroplasts plants can’t make their own sugars! Without sugar from the Chloroplasts, a plant’s mitochondria can’t make ATP (cell energy)

4 3. Why do plant cells have geometric shapes
3. Why do plant cells have geometric shapes? (like rectangles or hexagons) The cell wall is hard & keeps the plant cell’s shape! * The rigid cell wall is what allows plants to grow tall.

5 4. What is the arrow pointing at in the animal cell?
Nucleus * It’s often the only organelle that you can see under a light microscope (like the ones we use)

6 5. What is the largest organelle in an animal cell?
Nucleus * It’s often the only organelle that you can see under a light microscope (like the ones we use)

7 In order to see all the organelles in a cell, you need a more powerful microscope. This picture of an animal cell was taken using an electron microscope. Notice how big the nucleus is, compared to the other organelles.

8 Did you see any unicellular organisms in your pond water?
These tiny animals are collectively called Protists. They are each made up of a single Eukaryotic cell They are unicellular organisms Paramecium = a medium size protist Halteria = a tiny protest commonly found in stagnant pond water


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