Any organism that moves by means of pseudopodia (false feet) is called an amoeboid. Amoeboids are a branch of protozoans, but there are porotzoans that are not amoeboids. The answer to your question is that some protozoa (amoeboids) have pseudopodia (false feet), but the rest do not.
true
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
False leg or a False Foot
Amoebas have false feet or pseudopods to help the amoeba move. Amoebas uses their "false feet" to capture food and to find shelter.
Protozoa.
False
true
Protozoa are capable of locomotion by means of cilia, flagella, or a pseudopodium. While cilia and flagella are hair-like structures used by protozoa for movement, the pseudopodium is a projection or false limb utilized for the same purpose. Protozoa are uni-cellular organisms.
The term 'false feet' is the plural form; the singular form is 'false foot'.
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
False leg or a False Foot
Totally false: 1 mile = 5280 feet...
False. When you change from miles to feet you multiply because there are more feet in a meter then there are meters in a foot
Protozoa.
Amoebas have false feet or pseudopods to help the amoeba move. Amoebas uses their "false feet" to capture food and to find shelter.
It sure is. An amobea is a protozoa, a unicellular organism. It uses its pseduopods or fake feet to trap and eat food!
In 2012 protozoa dicovered