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Euglena swim towards light using a light-detecting eyespot located near their flagellum. This process, known as phototaxis, allows Euglena to move towards light sources for photosynthesis and energy production.
Paramecium can respond to light by moving towards or away from it through a process called phototaxis. When exposed to light, Paramecium will swim towards the light source (positive phototaxis) or swim away from it (negative phototaxis) depending on the species and environmental conditions.
No. That would be a bad choice.
Algal cells, such as those from species like Chlamydomonas and Euglena, have flagella that enable them to swim in water. These cells use their flagella to move towards light for photosynthesis and to find nutrients.
i don't see the problem with swimming in a pool of algae i wound not swallow it thought! it may not be good for u
They'll swim to where it gets warming, usually towards the equator.
They find it swim towards it and eats it.
No. There could be a lot of poisonous sea anemones and bacteria inside the algae ocean. You can also get tangled in sea plants when you are swimming.
They swim around and when they sea their food they swim towards it and snap it goes
Test your water for phosphates. Leaves contain it and phosphates are a growth nutrient for algae. Always use a sodium bromide based algaecide when dealing with yellow algae. (Yellow/brown/mustard algae is chlorine resistant.)
Algae will grow in temperatures from approx 5 to 40 degrees Celsius (approx 40 to 100 Fahrenheit). It does depend on which specific types of algae, as well as the colony size, but this is the general temperature tolerance for growth of algae.
A person can go swimming in a pool a few minutes after adding algae treatment and shock to the water. This is provided that a low dose was used. The manufacturers of the algae treatment recommend that a person waits 45 minutes to an hour to swim after adding a normal dose.