it pumps water into the cells
paramecium has the contractile vacuole yooo!
The contractile vacuole in a paramecium excretes excess freshwater in the organism. It does this continually because water is constantly diffusing into their cytoplasm. This occurs because freshwater paramecium live in a hypotonic environment.
The paramecium would have difficulty regulating its water balance, leading to swelling and potential bursting from an influx of water. Without a contractile vacuole, the paramecium would struggle to expel excess water and maintain osmotic balance, ultimately leading to cell damage or death.
The paramecium contains a vacuole called a contractile vauole. By contracting rhythmically, this specialized vacuole pumps excess water out of the cell. the control of water content within the cell is just one example of an important process known as homeostasis. Homeostasis is the maintenance of a controlled internal environment.
Paramecium expels excess water by contracting its contractile vacuole, a specialized structure that accumulates and pumps out water from the cell. This helps maintain the proper internal environment and osmotic balance within the cell.
A paramecium eliminates excess water through a contractile vacuole, a specialized structure that collects and expels water to regulate the cell's internal environment. The contractile vacuole helps maintain osmotic balance by preventing the cell from taking in too much water and potentially bursting.
contractile vacuole
They arf type of excretory organell.They remove excess water from cell.
i don't know sorry
Sure I guess well kind of... not really
CiliaContractile VacuoleFood VacuoleGulletAnal Opening
A contractile vacuole is present in a paramecium protozoa but absent in the cells of a strawberry plant. The contractile vacuole helps regulate water content in paramecium cells by expelling excess water, a function not needed in plant cells due to their rigid cell walls.