QUESTION IMAGE
Question
chlorophyll or colorless
- compare: how did the blood cells look different to the plant cells (color, shape, and size)?
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choose other slides to explore under the microscope!
- explore and draw other slides. write the magnification (zoom - in) and name below.
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slide name: slide name: slide name:
Question 7
To answer how blood cells differ from plant cells:
- Color: Blood cells (e.g., human red blood cells) are often pale pink/red (due to hemoglobin), while plant cells (e.g., onion epidermis) are typically colorless or have natural pigments (green from chloroplasts in leaf cells).
- Shape: Blood cells (red) are biconcave discs (no nucleus in mammals), plant cells have a rigid, fixed shape (rectangular/ polygonal) due to the cell wall.
- Size: Blood cells (red) are smaller (∼7 - 8 μm diameter), plant cells (e.g., onion) are larger (∼10 - 100 μm, varies by type).
This is a practical lab task. Choose slides (e.g., onion epidermis, cheek cells, bacteria) and record magnification (e.g., 40x, 100x, 400x) and slide name.
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- Color: Blood cells (e.g., red blood cells) may appear red/pink (from hemoglobin), while plant cells (e.g., onion) are often colorless or green (with chloroplasts).
- Shape: Blood cells (red) are biconcave discs (flexible, no fixed shape without a wall), plant cells have a rigid, polygonal/rectangular shape (due to the cell wall).
- Size: Blood cells are generally smaller (e.g., red blood cells: ~7–8 μm) than many plant cells (e.g., onion epidermal cells: ~10–100 μm).