Paramecium.
no only animal and protists have cilia
?
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)
Ways that protists move:flagellaciliumpseudopodSome protists don't move at all.It uses its flagella. Some like the ameoba don't have a flagella but can move around with their body
TRUE
Bacteria only have cilia while protists have both cilia and flagella.
cilia and fallegella
no only animal and protists have cilia
They move with flagella, cilia, or pseudopods.
These are anaerobic flagellated protozoan ( protists ), so flagella instead of cilia.
Protists move using various methods such as cilia, flagella, or pseudopods. Cilia are tiny hair-like structures that beat rhythmically to propel the protist through water. Flagella are long whip-like structures that rotate to generate movement. Pseudopods are temporary bulges of the cell membrane that extend and contract to pull the protist along a surface.
Flagella and cilia aid in motion in protists. At the same time, cilia and flagella beat water back and forth so that it can go through the mouth-like openings of protists for them to pick food particles.
Cilia in eukaryotes and flagella in Protists and Bacteria.
Movement and feeding.
protists cells cilia cytoplasm and fangella
?
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)