NO, flagella is tiny organelles on cells. The tail of sperm and even bacteria has flagella, though.
Some bacteria have flagella, which appearance resembles a long thin tail. They use this to move around. Others "squirm" and glide.
The Euglena are unicellular organisms with flagella. These flagella are long whip-like tailsused for movement
It is called a flagellum.
two flagella at right angles to each other.
Flagella. Flagella Flagellum (flagella is the plural form) flagella
NO, flagella is tiny organelles on cells. The tail of sperm and even bacteria has flagella, though.
In a Prokaryotic cell, these structures are the flagella.
Some bacteria have flagella, which appearance resembles a long thin tail. They use this to move around. Others "squirm" and glide.
Some bacteria have a whip-like tail called aflagellum. This structure is essential for locomotion, or motility.
The Euglena are unicellular organisms with flagella. These flagella are long whip-like tailsused for movement
Flagella is not a virus. It is a tail-like protrusion of a cell body. A sperm cell has a flagella which is integral to itd locomotion.
An analogy for flagella might be a fish. the fishes tail propels it forward.
If you mean flagella, that is the plural of flagellum. A flagellum is a long tapered extension of a microorganism, like a tail, utilized for mobility somewhat similarly to the tail of a fish.
Flagella
Similar to flagella .
It is called a flagellum.