Animals cells use cilia and flagella for movement.
Generally neither. Plant cells to not have flagella and, apart from sperm, neither do animal cells. Flaglla are more characteristic of bacteria and protists.
Flagella are not cells - they are extensions of cells that render the cell motile. (Think of it as a tail of some sort.) Sperms have flagella and other unicellular organisms such as paramecium and other organisms such as bacteria have flagella too. It isn't common for plant cells to have flagella.
It is considered to be animal like because of it's movement by flagella or pseudopodia, or both.
centrioles, lysosomes, cilia or flagella
there are 2 things that plant have while animal dont plant have a cell wall,has a chloroplast and animal dont the only thing that animal have that plant dont is a flagella ..(:
Generally not, although some plant sperm do have flagella.
Most plant cells have neither flagellum nor cilium but in some cases there are exceptions. For example, the cycads have some cells with cilia and flagella. In particular, sperm cells have a flagella.
it is not found in plants unless bacteria is in the plant because it is the tail part of bacteria. i am a 5th grader
mitochondria flagella cilia just to name a few
No protists ure a flagella because only animal cells have a flagella.
Flagellum, (plural flagella) is mainly found on sperm, its the tail.