YES
Intracellular
A cat is an example of an organism that doesn't carry out extracellular digestion. Parasites and fungi are examples of organisms that use extracellular digestion.
The primary site of intracellular digestion are the lysosomes.
Centipede digestion is intracellular. They have a digestive system where food is broken down within specialized cells through intracellular processes.
Unicellular eukaryotes achieve intracellular digestion through the process of endocytosis, phagocytosis, and use of food vacuoles and lysosomes. A paramecium is an example of an organism that uses intracellular digestion vs. humans which utilize extracellular digestion.
No. its intracellular.
It is extracellular
Lysosomes
Nope.
intracellular
Extracellular digestion is found in organisms like fungi, some bacteria, and animals, where enzymes are secreted outside the cell to break down food. Intracellular digestion occurs within cells and is common in single-celled organisms like amoebas and some types of sponges, where food particles are engulfed and digested inside specialized structures called vacuoles.
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