Euglina has flagella. Paramesium has cilia. Amoeba has pseudopods
Amoeba have pseudopodia and a few species have flagella. Google Rhizomastigina and you will find information on the type of amoeba that have flagella.
Cilia , flagella, and pseudopodia all help an organism move. They are also all thin, hair-like structures. Cilia are shorter than flagella. Flagella are whip-like.
No euglena is not a ciliate. It is a flagellate.
Euglena doesn't have cilia instead it has flagella for locomotion
The euglena moves using a single flagellum.
of course they are ciliates.
No
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
by using pseudopodia, flagella, or cilia
cilia and flagella
Cilia and flagella
1. Flagella (long hairlike projections) 2. Cilia (Tiny hairlike projections) 3. Amoeba (ameboid movement by pseudopods, which means "false foot")
Protozoans move with the help Pseudopodia, cilia and flagella. Pseudopodia - Amoeba Cilia - Paramaecium Flagella - Euglena
protists. most likely consumers. they use flagella, cilia, and pseudopodia ( they are a mode of movement)
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
by using pseudopodia, flagella, or cilia
Flagella, pseudopodia. cilia
cilia and flagella
Cilia and flagella
There are a few ways that single-celled organisms can move. These are by crawling on pseudopodia, using cilia, or using flagella.
Cilia and Pseudopodia
i donno
1. Flagella (long hairlike projections) 2. Cilia (Tiny hairlike projections) 3. Amoeba (ameboid movement by pseudopods, which means "false foot")
They're both Eukaryote and both have nuclei's