the sun is important to plant cells because the sun helps them reproduce wow and im in first grade
Giant sea kelp belongs to a group of protists known as brown algae. Despite its plant-like appearance, it is classified within the protist kingdom due to its unique characteristics and evolutionary history.
Algae protists are the most similar to plants due to their ability to perform photosynthesis and produce their own food using sunlight, just like plants.
Organisms like plants use sunlight through photosynthesis to make energy, while animals and other organisms consume food to obtain energy through processes like respiration or fermentation.
Producers are organisms, like plants and certain types of protists, which make their own food from the sun's energy. This process is called photosynthesis, in which the plant's/protist's cell(s) use their chloroplasts to convert sun energy into cell energy. This is the overall equation: . The producers are at the bottom of the food chain/web. Hope I helped!
Stentor is an animal-like protist, specifically a ciliate. It is a single-celled organism that possesses both plant-like and animal-like characteristics but is classified as a protozoan due to its predatory feeding behavior and lack of cell walls found in plants.
Animal like Protist, Fungus like Protist, and Plant like Protist
Animal like protist. Protozoa means primitive animal.
Euglena is a plant-like protist that has an eye spot called a stigma, which helps it to detect light. This allows Euglena to move towards light for photosynthesis and to avoid bright sunlight that can be harmful.
i learned about it in science and i just did a report on it and did tons of research and i know it is a plant like protist
Theprotoctist kingdom is divided into "Plant-like protist" , "Animal-like protist" and "fungi- like protist"
algae
Plant-like protists are always Unicellular.
Plant like protist
Tadstool
Yes it is a protist cos its plant-like and can only survive in water
flagella or cilia.
Giant sea kelp belongs to a group of protists known as brown algae. Despite its plant-like appearance, it is classified within the protist kingdom due to its unique characteristics and evolutionary history.