answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

As there is a higher concentration of salt in the sea water, salt will diffuse into the cell and this will cause the cell to shrink.

User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What changes would take place in the chlamydomonas cell if it were transfered to sea water?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is the locomotive organs of chlamydomonas?

the locomotive organs of chlamydomonas are flagella which help them to swim through the water


What makes drinking water green?

Chlamydomonas


What does the chlamydomonas cell do?

The cytoplasm in the cell of a chlamydomonas helps to suspend the organelles in the cell.


What changes takes place when water is heated or cooled?

what changes take place when water is heated or cooled


What changes take when water is heated or cooled?

what changes take place when water is heated or cooled


What is the physical description of the green algae Chlamydomonas Reinhardtii?

A chlamydomonas is a single-celled organism which lives under water. it can move itself to the light to photosynthesise , and store excess food as starch.


Which change takes place durning the boiling of water?

Water changes phase.


What is it when water changes to water vapor?

When water changes to water vapor, it has changed its state from liquid to vapor and no chemical change has taken place. It's only a physical change.


What is the function of contractile vacuole in chlamydomonas?

it eliminates excess water form an organisms body


When a saucepan full of water is on a hotplate how is the heat transfered?

radinate


What actually transfered when you dipped your finger in to the water?

Cold


What is the name of the process in which chlamydomonas makes glucose?

photosynthesis; as in the breakdown of an average plant cell, you will see that the Chlamydomonas cell contains Clorophyl, the chemical used in plants to convert water & sunlight into glucose. The Chlamydomonas does the same thing, pretty much.