No they do not. That is the difference between the three types of motility in bacteria. There is gliding among Toxoplasma gondii. Amoeboid movement in which the polymerization/depolymerization of actin leads to the formation of pseudopodia, filopodia and/or lamellipodia that enable the cell to crawl along a surface is second. The last form of movement is flagellar.
by using flagella
They have Pseudopodia
Yes, eukaryotic cells have structures like flagella or cilia that help them move. They can also undergo processes like amoeboid movement to change shape and move. Organisms made up of eukaryotic cells, like animals and fungi, are also capable of mobility.
cells move by wiggling their body cilia or flagella
Yes, flagella is like a tail at the end of the cell that helps the cell move.
All mature diatoms lack flagella, but their gametes may be either amoeboid or flagellated.
Protists are single-celled and they usually move by cilia, flagella, or by amoeboid mechanisms For example; Plasmodium.
To move cells.
what exactly is the question? The difference between the two is simply that euk. contain a nucleus (Well... flagella is different in both types... eukarya has a helicoidal movement that it's not in prokaryotic cells...)
Ways that protists move:flagellaciliumpseudopodSome protists don't move at all.It uses its flagella. Some like the ameoba don't have a flagella but can move around with their body
If they have pseudopods, cillia or flagella they can move.
there are no animal cells that have a flagella, as animal cells, for the most part are stationary. Some move with aid by blood, etc. Only prokaryotes (Bacteria) have flagella, and only certain ones. I hope this clarifies the situation for you.