the cells are green
suck my balls
Flagellum can be found in some prokaryote and eukaryote cells but not in plant cells. Plant cells have cell walls to provide rigidness and that would contrast with flagellum, which purpose is to allow flexibility and movement.
Bacteria, some cells
Flagellum are organelles resembling hairlike structures. They enable movement of the cells in which they are a part of.
-flagellum -pseudopodia -cilia
an euglena has a flagellum and a green algae is green
Muscle cells do not have flagella. Flagella are for a cell's or small organism's movement.
Flagella are the threadlike structures that propel cells through liquids. They are whip-like appendages that extend from the cell membrane and rotate to generate movement. Flagella are found in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
The flagellum is the hair-like projections on the outside of the cell. Prokaryotes are cells that have nucleuses. Eukaryotes do not have nucleuses.
Yes it is - the differences between plant and animal cells are essentially that plant cells have a cell wall and chloroplast (which animal cells do not have) and animal cells have centrioles (which help to make up the cytoskeleton of the cell, and which plant cells do not have). You can say in general that plant cells do not have flagellum, where animal cells do, but there are flagellum on plant reproductive cells. So just say that somatic (non-reproductive cells) plant cells do not have flagellum.
No they do not, they don't have flagellum either.
A flagellum is a tail-like extension of certain cells. The cells use it to move about.