Paramecia!
The threadlike structures extending from the cell membrane of paramecia are called cilia. They are used for locomotion and to help with feeding by creating currents in the water to bring food particles close to the cell.
No, paramecia have cilia, which are tiny hair-like projections that propel the paramecium through its environment. Both flagella and cilia propel their cell through its environment.
Most paramecia reproduce asexually through binary fission, where the cell divides into two identical daughter cells. This process allows for rapid population growth and is a common method of reproduction in single-celled organisms like paramecia.
The treadlike structures extending from the cell membrane of paramecia are called cilia. Cilia are hair-like structures that beat in a coordinated manner to help the paramecium move through its watery environment and help with feeding.
There is one cell in a paramecia.
no because it is part of a much larger being
These are all eukaryotic cells and they all contain membrane bound organelles such as the nucleus.
Dolly the sheep would exhibit the traits of the sheep whose body cells were used for cloning, not the one whose egg cell was used. This is because Dolly's genetic material came entirely from the somatic cell (body cell) of the donor sheep, which determined her physical characteristics. The egg cell provided only the environment for the cell to develop but did not influence her genetic traits.
It is baisically the post office for the cell. It packages proteins and send it out to diffrent parts of the cell.
Bacteria is a one-cell animal.Bacteria isn't an animal. all animals have multiple cells------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Wrong, amoeba and paramecia (among others) are one-cell animals.
Plant and animal cells are alike because they both have a nucleus, chromosomes, a vacuole.