Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

plant cell analogy directions: an analogy is a comparison of two things…

Question

plant cell analogy directions: an analogy is a comparison of two things that are similar. in this case we are going to compare a plant cell to a food factory because they both have structures that perform similar functions. use the diagram below of a food factory to fill in the analogies below. diagram of food factory with labels: solar panel, power plant, food processing plant, storage tanks, waste disposal plant, bakery, transport company, employee bus, factory office, factory grounds, gates, fence, etc. table: columns: food factory part, is like the... (choose the organelle), because they both... (write the function). rows: 1. fence: cell wall, surround and support; 2. gates; 3. solar panels; 4. food processing plant; 5. storage tanks; 6. power lines; 7. factory office; 8. factory grounds; 9. waste disposal plant; 10. bakery; 11. transport company; 12. employee bus.

Explanation:

Response

To solve the plant cell analogy with a food factory, we analyze each factory part and match it to a plant cell organelle by function:

1. Fence (already done: Cell wall, function: Surround and support)
2. Gates
  • Organelle: Cell membrane
  • Function: Regulate entry/exit (like gates control factory access).
3. Solar Panels
  • Organelle: Chloroplast
  • Function: Convert light energy to chemical energy (photosynthesis, like solar panels generate energy).
4. Food Processing Plant
  • Organelle: Chloroplast (or Mitochondrion, but chloroplast makes food; if processing, maybe Chloroplast for making glucose, Mitochondrion for breaking it down—context: plant cell, so Chloroplast for “food production” via photosynthesis).
  • Function: Produce food (glucose) from raw materials (CO₂, H₂O + light).
5. Storage Tanks (Food/Water)
  • Organelle: Vacuole
  • Function: Store food, water, or waste (like tanks store resources).
6. Power Plant
  • Organelle: Mitochondrion
  • Function: Convert energy (glucose → ATP) for cell use (like power plant generates factory energy).
7. Factory Office
  • Organelle: Nucleus
  • Function: Control operations (office manages factory, nucleus controls cell).
8. Factory Grounds
  • Organelle: Cytoplasm
  • Function: Hold organelles (grounds hold factory structures, cytoplasm holds cell organelles).
9. Waste Disposal Plant
  • Organelle: Lysosome (or Vacuole for waste storage; Lysosome digests waste)
  • Function: Break down/recycle waste (disposal plant processes waste).
10. Bakery
  • Organelle: Ribosome (or Chloroplast; bakery makes food, ribosomes make proteins—if “food” is protein, Ribosome; if glucose, Chloroplast. Context: food factory, bakery makes “food” (e.g., bread), so Ribosome (makes protein “food” for cell).
  • Function: Produce “food” (proteins) for the cell.
11. Transport Company
  • Organelle: Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)
  • Function: Transport materials (ER transports proteins/organelles, transport company moves factory goods).
12. Employee Files
  • Organelle: Nucleolus (or Chromosomes; files store info, chromosomes store genetic info)
  • Function: Store genetic/operational info (files hold employee data, chromosomes hold cell’s genetic instructions).
Example Completion (e.g., for “Gates”):
Food Factory PartIs like the… (organelle)Because they both… (function)

(Repeat for each row, matching function to organelle role.)

Key Logic:

Analogies rely on functional similarity (e.g., “control access” → cell membrane; “energy production” → chloroplast/mitochondrion; “storage” → vacuole). Use plant cell organelle functions (e.g., cell wall: support, cell membrane: regulation, chloroplast: photosynthesis, mitochondrion: respiration, nucleus: control, vacuole: storage, ER: transport, ribosome: protein synthesis, lysosome: waste breakdown) to match factory roles.

Answer:

To solve the plant cell analogy with a food factory, we analyze each factory part and match it to a plant cell organelle by function:

1. Fence (already done: Cell wall, function: Surround and support)
2. Gates
  • Organelle: Cell membrane
  • Function: Regulate entry/exit (like gates control factory access).
3. Solar Panels
  • Organelle: Chloroplast
  • Function: Convert light energy to chemical energy (photosynthesis, like solar panels generate energy).
4. Food Processing Plant
  • Organelle: Chloroplast (or Mitochondrion, but chloroplast makes food; if processing, maybe Chloroplast for making glucose, Mitochondrion for breaking it down—context: plant cell, so Chloroplast for “food production” via photosynthesis).
  • Function: Produce food (glucose) from raw materials (CO₂, H₂O + light).
5. Storage Tanks (Food/Water)
  • Organelle: Vacuole
  • Function: Store food, water, or waste (like tanks store resources).
6. Power Plant
  • Organelle: Mitochondrion
  • Function: Convert energy (glucose → ATP) for cell use (like power plant generates factory energy).
7. Factory Office
  • Organelle: Nucleus
  • Function: Control operations (office manages factory, nucleus controls cell).
8. Factory Grounds
  • Organelle: Cytoplasm
  • Function: Hold organelles (grounds hold factory structures, cytoplasm holds cell organelles).
9. Waste Disposal Plant
  • Organelle: Lysosome (or Vacuole for waste storage; Lysosome digests waste)
  • Function: Break down/recycle waste (disposal plant processes waste).
10. Bakery
  • Organelle: Ribosome (or Chloroplast; bakery makes food, ribosomes make proteins—if “food” is protein, Ribosome; if glucose, Chloroplast. Context: food factory, bakery makes “food” (e.g., bread), so Ribosome (makes protein “food” for cell).
  • Function: Produce “food” (proteins) for the cell.
11. Transport Company
  • Organelle: Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER)
  • Function: Transport materials (ER transports proteins/organelles, transport company moves factory goods).
12. Employee Files
  • Organelle: Nucleolus (or Chromosomes; files store info, chromosomes store genetic info)
  • Function: Store genetic/operational info (files hold employee data, chromosomes hold cell’s genetic instructions).
Example Completion (e.g., for “Gates”):
Food Factory PartIs like the… (organelle)Because they both… (function)

(Repeat for each row, matching function to organelle role.)

Key Logic:

Analogies rely on functional similarity (e.g., “control access” → cell membrane; “energy production” → chloroplast/mitochondrion; “storage” → vacuole). Use plant cell organelle functions (e.g., cell wall: support, cell membrane: regulation, chloroplast: photosynthesis, mitochondrion: respiration, nucleus: control, vacuole: storage, ER: transport, ribosome: protein synthesis, lysosome: waste breakdown) to match factory roles.