A membrane-bound vacuole (as in an ameba) where ingested food is digested.
A paramecium uses phagocytosis to form a food vacuole. In this process, the paramecium surrounds the food particle with its cell membrane, forming a vacuole containing the food. The food vacuole then fuses with lysosomes to digest the food.
The food vacuole in a paramecium is a structure that forms during phagocytosis to engulf and digest food particles. It helps break down the food into simpler compounds that can be absorbed and utilized by the paramecium for energy and nutrients. Once digestion is complete, the food vacuole expels any remaining waste materials from the cell.
The amoeba surrounds the food with psuedopods and forms a food vacuole. This vacuole then digests the food with digestive enzymes.
food vacuole:)
Well the answer to your question is (Plasma).
Enzymes are the substances that enter the food vacuole in amoebas to break down the food into smaller molecules that can be absorbed by the cell. These enzymes help in the process of digestion within the food vacuole.
yes, the vacuole is the cell that stores food,water ect.
through budding of the vacuole from the plasma membrane
The Vacuole stores food water and waste.
to digest the food.
its false feet (pseudopods) encircles the food and the membrane in contact dissolves to form a food vacuole. then the food is ejested through the contractile vacuole.
Paramecium digests food in a specialized vacuole known as the food vacuole. After the organism consumes food through its oral groove, the food particles are enclosed in this vacuole, where enzymes break them down into usable nutrients. The nutrients are then absorbed by the paramecium, while waste products are expelled from the cell through a process called exocytosis.