protist
The cilia does a number of things in the animal cell. The main function is to help the cells in terms of movement.
Cilia are used by some single-celled organisms, such as Paramecia, for movement. In multicellular organisms, cilia can be found in the respiratory tract to help move mucus and in the fallopian tubes to help move eggs.
Cilia: Small hair-like structures on the protist that wave back and forth to move it. Flagella: A whip-like structure on the end of a protist that twirls to propel the organism. Pseudopods: Foot-like extentions of cytoplasm that extend outward and pull the organism with it.
Flagella and cilia aid in motion in protists. At the same time, cilia and flagella beat water back and forth so that it can go through the mouth-like openings of protists for them to pick food particles.
Cilia are found on the surface of many animal cells, where they help with movement and sensory functions. Flagella are typically found on certain types of cells, such as sperm cells, and they help with cell movement.
cilia are short hair-like structures used for locomotion (movement)
Cilia are short hair-like structures found on the surface of some animal cells. They are involved in cell movement and in moving fluids around cells. Plants do not have cilia, but they do have structures like flagella and motile cilia in some algae species.
cilia are tiny hair-like structures that "push" or "row" the organism through a medium. Double check though. I think a paramecium may move using a flagella (a single larger whip-like structure)
A protist is not an animal, its a single-celled organism (not technically an organism) and can "swim" in anything----------------A protist can be an animal (paramecium). A protist can be multicellular (algae) A protist is an organism because it can respond to stimuli, reproduce, develop and maintain homeostasis. They can swim in any fluid as long as it is not toxic or uninhabitable (boiling water, liquid nitrogen, sulfuric acid)) for their species.
Cilia are hair-like structures found on the surface of cells. They help in movement by either propelling fluid or particles past the cell, or by moving the cell itself. In the respiratory tract, cilia help to sweep mucus and debris out of the airways.
Paramecium is a representative of the protist group called ciliates. They are single-celled organisms with hair-like structures called cilia that help in movement and feeding. Paramecium are found in freshwater environments and play a role in aquatic ecosystems.
Cilia