joonkimdds Senior Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member May 20, 2009 #1 Advertisement - Members don't see this ad it says thylakoid is a series of disks stacked on each other that contain pigments needed for photosynthesis. It sounds more like granum to me.
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad it says thylakoid is a series of disks stacked on each other that contain pigments needed for photosynthesis. It sounds more like granum to me.
razblo Full Member 10+ Year Member May 20, 2009 #2 I think it's worded in an ambiguous way so I could see where there can be some confusion. In the question/statement I believe it's referring to individual thylakoids stacked on top of each other and not the stack as a whole, which would be a granum. Hope that helps. Upvote 0 Downvote
I think it's worded in an ambiguous way so I could see where there can be some confusion. In the question/statement I believe it's referring to individual thylakoids stacked on top of each other and not the stack as a whole, which would be a granum. Hope that helps.
prsndwg Full Member 10+ Year Member Aug 4, 2009 #3 Does thylakoid contain undefferentiated meristem cells? Upvote 0 Downvote
dentrilla Full Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Aug 4, 2009 #4 prsndwg said: Does thylakoid contain undefferentiated meristem cells? Click to expand... .... umm.. .. thylakoids are inside chloroplast which are inside cells... Upvote 0 Downvote
prsndwg said: Does thylakoid contain undefferentiated meristem cells? Click to expand... .... umm.. .. thylakoids are inside chloroplast which are inside cells...
Extirpator Full Member 10+ Year Member Aug 5, 2009 #6 prsndwg said: Does thylakoid contain undefferentiated meristem cells? Click to expand... no Upvote 0 Downvote