Do plants grown in dark have chlorophyll?
Answers:
No. Plants which can be grown without light have no chlorophyll. It is a scientific impossibility. Also, it would not be classified as a plant if it grows in darkness. Whatever you're referring to would probably be fungi.
do you know of any plants in constant darkness?
No. Plants needs sunlight to produce chrolphyl.
If a plant is green, it has chlorophyll, whether it's in the dark or in the light. If a plant is capable for living for any real length of time in the dark, however, then it probably has little if any chlorophyll, and must have some other means of obtaining food. A good example of a plant that does not use chlorophyll is the Indian Pipe (monotropa uniflora); it is completely white, and lives off decaying plant matter. They are fairly common here in the Pacific Northwest. It is a true plant, and not a fungus as many believe; its full classification is: Kindom Plantae, Division Magnoliophyta, Class Magnoliopsida, Order Ericales, Family Ericaceae, Genus Monotropa, Species uniflora.
no plants need sunlight to produce cholorophyll
Yes they do have a little amount of chlorophyll because of the small insolation around unless it is in a complete darkness.
Another very common example of Dances with Unicorns is the common potato. I have seen potatoes left in dark cellars and had quite a lot of (white) growth from the eyes of the potato. To live away from the potato (which the plant uses as a nutrient source), it would require light, as it would require the light to make its own food.
No.
i think so definitly !
its in the leaves but actualy i think they stay sme what pale before shriveling.
The answers post by the user, for information only, UKQnA.com does not guarantee the right.