Euglena, Paramecium and Amoeba are all monocellular organisms. The major difference lies in their mode locomotion. The amoeba moves with the help of its pseudopodia, that are temporary protrusions of cytoplasm, giving leg like appearance. In paramecium, there are small outgrowths that are called as Cilia (Sing. Cilium). These cilia are thousands in number and are present all over the cells' surface. They act like an oar. Finally, Euglena have Flagellum (plur. flagella). A flagella beats like a whip to provide driving force for the movement.
Apart from this, both Euglena and Paramecium have a fixed body shape but amoeba continuously keeps on changing its shape . Amoeba and Paramecium are heterotrophic and lack chloroplast while Eugena has chloroplasts and could synthesise its own food. Amoeba and Euglena are monokaryotic ( One nucleus only) while paramecium has two nuclei and is dikaryotic.
A particle smaller than atom is a subatomic particle, protons , neutrons, and , electrons, the smallest one is an electron, smaller than that are point particles and elementary particles, one elementary particle and point particle is a quark, up quarks down quarks the smallest single thing found so far is a GLUON, which is the force which binds/holds quarks together. Where the devil lives in anti matter there are also atoms and subatomic particles and point particles but just anti, anti- GLUON, anti-QUARK, anti-ATOM, anti-SUBATOMIC PARTICLE. There is something called the string theory, and super string theory that theorizes about bosonic/boson strings but it can not be provine yet, and I think a gluon is still alot smaller than a bosonic/boson string if they are true.
HOPE THIS HELPS
they both are alike because they are uni-cellur,both move,ingest food through openings,and both live in water.
The Paramecium can reproduce asexually and sexually while Euglena can only reproduce asexually.
in spelling ..
there is no difference
I think the answer could be both spirogyre and euglena move by using flagella
what are some similarities between euglena and plant cells
The parameceum can reproduce asexually and sexuallly while the other can only do it asexually. they have diifferent structures and the euglena has a flagellum while the paramecium has cilia and they eat differently. The paremecium uses the cilia to get a water current going and the food gets sucked in, and the euglena uses photosynethesis by using its stigma to indicate areas of light and if not then it will just get food like the other.
This is a euglena, a type of protist. I have never heard of a euglena oval but under a microscope, euglena have an oval shape within them.
euglena does indeed have chrlorplasts.
The motility organ of paranema is the flagellum.
I think the answer could be both spirogyre and euglena move by using flagella
Euglena can be both heterotroph and autotrophs but algae can be only autotroph. Euglena act like herotroph when sunlight is not available.
what are some similarities between euglena and plant cells
The most obvious difference between an amoeba and a paramecium or euglena is that the amoeba has no overall shape, and the entire cell changes its shape as the amoeba moves. The paramecium and the euglena both have definite shapes which they do not alter. The amoeba can engulf food particles at any point on its own cell membrane, but the paramedium has an oral groove which is where it ingests food particles. And the euglena also has a chloroplast, unlike the other two (or any other protozoan).
The parameceum can reproduce asexually and sexuallly while the other can only do it asexually. they have diifferent structures and the euglena has a flagellum while the paramecium has cilia and they eat differently. The paremecium uses the cilia to get a water current going and the food gets sucked in, and the euglena uses photosynethesis by using its stigma to indicate areas of light and if not then it will just get food like the other.
This is a euglena, a type of protist. I have never heard of a euglena oval but under a microscope, euglena have an oval shape within them.
Euglena are not bacteria.
euglena does indeed have chrlorplasts.
Euglena gracilis
They are in genus Euglena.
y euglena is called the connecting link between plants and animal