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Euglena uses their two whip like tails called flagellum. The longer flagellum spins i a pattern that will pull the organism rapidly through the water. When the flagella are not being used they move into the gullet.
Euglena are flagellated unicellular organisms, so they move by beating their flagella.... somewhat like a tadpole.
Can be both. There are plenty of unicellular algae, such as Euglena, but most plants you see underwater are algae too (as long as they don't have flowers; a water lily is not an alga), and these are obviously multicellular. :P Oh, by the way, the singular is alga. One alga, two algae. ^^
there are two flagellums on a Euglena a short one and a long one. They are both held by a pouch. The long flagella helps the euglena move.
A flagellum is a long tail like structure that protrudes off the bacterium body.
It is called the Flagellum :D Flagellum- a long whiplike outgrowth from a cell that acts as an organ.
A flagellum is a long, thread-like organelle used by many microscopic organisms for locomotion and feeding.
Euglena- protist with flagella these protists move pulling themselves with long whiplike structure called flagella
flagellum
filaments
flagellum (flagella)