dont tell me to answer this question, i was the one who asked you.
Ciliated epithelial cells are typically found in animal tissues, particularly in the respiratory tract where they help move mucus and debris out of the airways. Plant cells do not have cilia but may have flagella for movement.
First, Family! Tough to think of Cilia without encountering Flagella. Remember the Paramecium - it used cilia for motility; the flagella is a tail like structure also used to induce motion.Next, animal Cells are 'laden' with ciliated hairs - best example is the bronchial tubes - cilia used for internal motility.So now, do Plant Cells have cilia? Can't think of any now; so we have to go to smaller members of the Plant family - Protists and Phytoplankton are both ciliated and flagellated.
Ciliated epithelial cells are usually found in animals. They are involved in movement and transportation of mucus or other substances along surfaces in organs such as the respiratory tract and reproductive system. Plants do not possess ciliated epithelial cells.
Animal cells, not plant cells.
Animal cells have centrioles and plant cells do not.
Animal cells have lysosomes, plant cells don't. Plant cells have a cell wall made out of cellulose, animal cells don't. Animal cells have many small vacuoles, plant cells have one large vacuole. Plant cells have chloroplasts and chlorophyll, animal cells don't. Animal cells have centrioles, plant cells don't.
Well seeing it is a plant it has plant cells not animal cells
animal cells can't make their own food, plant cells can so animal cells need to eat plant cells
Humans are composed of animal cells. Plants are composed of plant cells
they both have vacuoles. plant cells have bigger vacuoles then animal cells
Animal cells are different from plant cells in that the cell wall of animal cells is not made up of cellulose.
plant cells have a cell wall and a cholorplast animal cells don't