File talk:Plant cell structure.png

出典:ウィキメディア・コモンズ (Wikimedia Commons)
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Problems[編集]

Great pic, but there are some scientific problems:

  1. The leukoplast (most commonly spelled leucoplast) is a non-pigemented plastid (i.e. chloroplast) and typically only occurs in non-photosynthetic tissues - which is slightly problematic since this cell also has chloroplasts (and it should since they are a defining character of a "plant cell") - and should probably be removed for simplicity and accuracy.
  2. The membrane around the vacuole is called the tonoplast - this should be added, the vacuole also takes up a lot of the cell - which is not really reflected here. The "wheel of cheese with a wegde removed" seems to be the best way to demonstrate with spatial relatioship between organelles in cells.
  3. The spatial relationship of the rough and sooth ER and the golgi is kind of weird - and might be better illustrated more like this - the smooth ER in the FPC are disconnected in this FPC image - when they are in fact continuous - and I think the "small membranous vesicles" shouldn't be there (vesicles are small membrane bound compartments that move stuff between parts of the cell, especially in the ER - they are not big wormy things). It should probably also be shown that the rough ER is rough because of the association of ribosomes. The golgi is usually just referred to ad a Golgi body.
  4. The filamentous cytoskeleton should probably be a different colour so it's not confused with the ER.
  5. Why does cytosol label point to a red circle? when cytosol fills the whole cell?
  6. For clarity things that are a part of a superstructure should be labelled together like this encarta diagram - which is not accurate but has nice clear labels.

--Peta 00:05, 1 June 2006 (UTC)[返信]

It has been corrected here: Image:Plant cell structure svg.svg. --Ysangkok 20:39, 9 December 2006 (UTC)[返信]

A group of cells that work together form tissue and a group of tissue working together creates, organs, a group of organs working together form a organ system, and the organ system makes a organism.