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The Euglena cell uses it's flagellum, which is like a tail that comes out from the back end of the cell, and whips it to move around through the water. Sometimes, the flagellum doesn't whip all at once and in the same movement, causing it to spiral as it moves in the general direction that it wants to.
I think the answer could be both spirogyre and euglena move by using flagella
The Euglena do not have a cell wall. What they have instead is a pellicle. The pellicle is what allows the shape to change.
Hi, I don't know all of the parts to a Euglena but some are Pigment shield, nucleus, nucleolus and contractile vacuole- I'm not sure it the last one is completely right but look it up anyway :)
The euglena is found in the protist kindom
The Euglena cell uses it's flagellum, which is like a tail that comes out from the back end of the cell, and whips it to move around through the water. Sometimes, the flagellum doesn't whip all at once and in the same movement, causing it to spiral as it moves in the general direction that it wants to.
I think the answer could be both spirogyre and euglena move by using flagella
The Euglena do not have a cell wall. What they have instead is a pellicle. The pellicle is what allows the shape to change.
Hi, I don't know all of the parts to a Euglena but some are Pigment shield, nucleus, nucleolus and contractile vacuole- I'm not sure it the last one is completely right but look it up anyway :)
Flagella is located as the 'tail' part of most cells, and this enables movement throughout the cell and body. For example, a sperm cell has flagella to make the cell move quickly for fertilization.
no
It is the animal cell.
Euglena isn't a animal or plant cell
The euglena is found in the protist kindom
flagellates
yes they do
yes