yes, paramecium is a single-celled protist. this is a seventh grade life-science standard.
A paramecium cell is in act a protozoa. It is actually a ciliate protozoa.
Paramecium are from the Kingdom Protozoa and Phylum Ciliophora.
it is animal like . that is why they even use the methylene blue stain to observe it under the microscope
Yes because that's the answer
No, it is a genus of protists.
a fungi :)
No
There are THREE major protists groups. Before, there were classified in two groups. This are the one: PROTOZOA ALGAE FUNGUS-LIKE FUNGI PROTISTS
Protozoa.
Protozoa move while algae do not.
Amoeba, paramecium, and euglena
You can't. An algae is a type of protozoa, and they are classified under the kingdom protista.
bacteria, algae...seem to recall them eating paramecium...
There are THREE major protists groups. Before, there were classified in two groups. This are the one: PROTOZOA ALGAE FUNGUS-LIKE FUNGI PROTISTS
Paramecium is a unicellular, ciliate, protozoa.
NO. PARAMOECIUM DOESN' T HAVE PLASTIDS BECAUSE IT IS A GENUS OF PROTOZOA. ONLY PLANTS HAVE PLASTIDS. FOR e.g. ALGAE-CHLAMYDOMONAS
Protozoa.
Protozoa move while algae do not.
Amoeba, paramecium, and euglena
You can't. An algae is a type of protozoa, and they are classified under the kingdom protista.
Protozoans and algae belong to the kindgom Protista. Algae are plant-like, and protozoa are animal-lie. There are two plural forms of protozoan: protozoa and protozoans.
A contractile vacuole is the organelle that is present in a paramecium protozoa but absent in the cells of a strawberry plant.
Yes. Paramecium is a genus of unicellular, or single-celled, protozoa.
Flagellates are of 2 types , Zooflagellates are Protozoa like while Phytoflagellates are Algae like .