Skin cells, brain cells, blood cells, etc.
Specialised cells other examples include epilithieum cells.
Mostly Plant cells and Bacteria, often some specialised cells will have cell walls.
Unicellular organisms have to complete all tasks to survive, and obviously have no specialised cells, while a multi cellular cell would be specialised and be made for a specific task such as a lung cell.
Merestematic cells
Sperm cells are zygotes (specialised cells with only 23 chromosomes).
sensory receptors - specialized nerve cells
Stem cells are cells that have not specialised. Specialist cells can only be the one thing that they are specialised for; ie, you cannot turn skin cells into a heart, or liver cells into a brain. Stem cells have not specialised and can therefore become any type of cell. I am not sure how they are stimulated to become one kind or another, but they can. Adult stem cells are not as good as embryonic stem cells, but because harvesting embryonic stem cells requires the destruction of a human embryo it is banned in many countries.
They're specialised because their sole job is to transport oxygen to the body's cells, and carry carbon dioxide away. This is similar to white blood cells who's only job is to defend the body from invading diseases.
no they are all sexually enviroment
cells
Unspecialised means no specialised function. For example ciliated cells vs nonciliated cells.
specialised cells that work together to preform a special task
Specialised cells other examples include epilithieum cells.
Unspecialised means no specialised function. For example ciliated cells vs nonciliated cells.
non you will die
Mostly Plant cells and Bacteria, often some specialised cells will have cell walls.
it's called your dad