Asexually. Many protozoans, such as Euglena or Amoeba, undergo binary fission, whereby a single-celled organism divides evenly into two identical cells.
actually, if i remember right they are both.
Asexually. Many protozoans, such as Euglena or Amoeba, undergo binary fission, whereby a single-celled organism divides evenly into two identical cells. actually, if i remember right they are both.
Euglena gracilis
The common name of Euglena gracilis is "euglena."
euglena does indeed have chrlorplasts.
Euglena are not bacteria.
Asexually. Many protozoans, such as Euglena or Amoeba, undergo binary fission, whereby a single-celled organism divides evenly into two identical cells. actually, if i remember right they are both.
Euglena is an algae.Chloroplasts are present in them.
Euglena is actually the genus name as well as the common name for this organism. Finding the exact species is difficult, because the genus Euglena has dozens of species in it.See the Related Links for more information about the genus Euglena as well as a list of the species in this genus.
Animal-like amoebas reproduce asexually by binary fission, where the cell divides into two daughter cells. Plant-like euglena can reproduce both sexually and asexually. During asexual reproduction, they undergo binary fission, while in sexual reproduction, two euglena cells fuse to exchange genetic material.
There are two main types of Euglena: autotrophic Euglena that can photosynthesize and heterotrophic Euglena that must ingest food particles to survive. Autotrophic Euglena have chloroplasts and can produce their own food through photosynthesis, while heterotrophic Euglena do not have chloroplasts and rely on absorbing nutrients from their environment.
The scientific name for euglena is Euglena gracilis. It is a single-celled, photosynthetic protist that can move by either using its flagellum or contracting its cell body.
bcoz euglena are unicellular organism .all euglena are chloroplast and can make their own foodby photosynthesis.