No, amoebas do not typically live in colonies. These single-celled protist are often found living alone in areas where freshwater is.
Paramecia are a type of protozoan that can be found in all types of water. Sometimes a paramecium lives in colonies, but they donâ??t have to.
Amoebas take in energy and reproduce and react to the environment - therefore, they are alive.
Amoeba lives alone.
To live .....!..:)
its an example of a response to a stimulus.
The paramecium.
I don't know about paramecium but amoebas eat paramecium.
A Paramecium is a protoctist
To live .....!..:)
a paramecium's cell is what you see because paramecium are unicellular
Paramecium live in freshwater and are also found in aquariums.
paramecium live in river, ditch, or sewer.
The presence of a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles, such as the mitochondria and the Golgi apparatus, places the paramecium within the domain Eukarya. Eukaryotes have cells with these membrane-bound organelles, which distinguishes them from prokaryotes.
marine
marine
These are fresh water protists. Lakes, streams and ponds would harbor paramecium and amoebae.
Both are aquatic in habit i.e. they live in water .
its an example of a response to a stimulus.
its an example of a response to a stimulus.
No they Do not live in colonies