These are anaerobic flagellated protozoan ( protists ), so flagella instead of cilia.
== == They depend on the kind of protozoan. Possibilities are flagella (flagellum singular), cilia, or a pseudopod. == == == ==
Paramecium - cilia.
the answer is ciliates this is protozoa that move using cilia, such as a paramecium. hope this helped, the science dude
Paramecium have cilia that cover their bodies.They belong to phylum Ciliophora of Protozoa in which group ciliate is present.
Bursaria Truncatella are protozoan, which means it moves using it's cilia. Cilia is a short hair like stucture on a cell which helps it move.
Bursaria Truncatella are protozoan, which means it moves using it's cilia. Cilia is a short hair like stucture on a cell which helps it move.
ciliates is the most complex, because ciliates has hundreds of tiny hairlike structures known as cilia
A paramecium is a unicellular freshwater microorganism that is classified as a protozoan. It is covered in fine cytoplasmic hair-like structures called cilia that it uses to propel itself.
A stentor moves by beating the cilia that cover its body. A stentor waves the cilia around its mouth and sweeps in food. When a stentor gets too large, it divides in half. Sizes are 1 to 2 mm (one of the largest protists). (eduplace.com)
No. This protist has flagella, not cilia.Retlated Information:Giardia lamblia (also known as: Giardia intestinalis, Lamblia intestinalis and Giardia duodenalis) is a protozoan parasite that causes giardiasis (gee-ar-die-a-sis).
Trophozoites are the active, feeding, and reproducing form of protozoan parasites and many species can form resistant cysts. When the cysts are ingested, the parasite is transmitted to a new host