It is true that cilia are extensions of animal cells and that they move rapidly. They are found in several locations in the human body, including the lungs.
Cilia are indeed hair-like extensions of animal cells that are used in movement. However, they can be in a few plants.
cilia are very small hair like organelles in the respiratory tract that are use to move excess mucus and foreign substances away from the lungs and toward the nasal and oral cavities to be expelled by the body.
They are composed of microtubules in a "9 + 2" array, similar to centrioles but with two additional microtubules in the center.
The absence of Cilia can be extremely harmful. They don't help just one part of the body but the body as a whole. It helps move fluid move from area of the cell to another. It is what helps the cells move through the body.
The word is Latin for eyelash. It refers to the hair-like projections on the surface of cells that are used for movement and other functions. The cells that line the cochlea in the inner ear have cilia that transmit a signal to the brain when they are bent by sound waves.
Np, they are less numerous then cilia
It is true that cilia are extensions of animal cells and that they move rapidly. They are found in several locations in the human body, including the lungs.
no only animal and protists have cilia
No they do not, they don't have flagellum either.
Generally, animal cells have cilia and plant cells do not.
Cilia
Most plant cells have neither flagellum nor cilium but in some cases there are exceptions. For example, the cycads have some cells with cilia and flagella. In particular, sperm cells have a flagella.
Animal cells have a lysosomes that are not present and cilia that are rarely seen in plant cells. The lysosomes are the recycling and disposal site in the animal cell. The cilia help the cell move.
These extensions are cilia and they continually propel debris-laden mucus toward the pharynx. Their source is the micro tubules that exert pressure on the plasma membrane
yes
yes but only some animal cells like amoeba and like
They are whiplike, motile cellular extensions that occur in large numbers on the exposed surfaces of certain cells
they are called cilia.