Bananers are the reason i attempted this question
Cilia and flagella are the means of locomotion in unicellular organisms. They differ in the numbers found in cell, their sizes and their shapes.
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
There are a few ways that single-celled organisms can move. These are by crawling on pseudopodia, using cilia, or using flagella.
Ways that protists move:flagellaciliumpseudopodSome protists don't move at all.It uses its flagella. Some like the ameoba don't have a flagella but can move around with their body
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.
Cilia are hair like structures which work as a collective to move substances. They are found commonly in the trachea, where they cilia waft the mucus, carrying things such as bacteria or dust, up the trachea, to where it can either be expelled from the body, or swallowed to be destroyed by the stomach acid. Here, they are a part of the immune system, as they help to prevent foreign objects from entering the lungs and causing infection. Cilia are also found in the fallopian tubes of females, where they waft the ovum towards to uterus. The flagella has two functions. The first is the most obvious; for movement, and the second is that it can be used as a sensory organelle. They are most commonly associated with the sperm cell, which uses its flagella to propel itself forwards, moving it in a whip like motion. The way in which the flagella is used as a sensory organelle is in that they protrude from the main body of the cell, meaning they can test the temperatures and chemical balances in their surroundings.
prokaryotes move with flagella that allow it to move towards food or away from danger. some bacteria however do not have flagella thus they move in different ways the myxobacteria for example, form a layer of slime; through wavelike contractions of the outer membrane they move the organisms through the slime. and spiral shaped bacteria move by a corkscrew like rotation. filaments inside the organisms cell walls contract and cause the bacterium to turn and move ahead.
Organelles, cytoplasm. Another Answer The nucleus is like the brain of the cell, it contains instructions for all the organelles, it tells them what to do and when to move or whatever, so the head honcho is the nucleus.
name three ways in which Australia from of government is different from that of great britad
Crimson, scarlet, or maroon. Those are three different ways to say red in English.
you can arrange three beads 9 different ways.
Movement and feeding.