No, malaria parasites do not move by flagella. Instead, they are primarily motile in their gamete stage, where they use a form of movement called gliding motility, facilitated by specialized secretory organelles. The malaria parasite, Plasmodium, is transmitted through the bite of infected female Anopheles mosquitoes, and its life cycle involves different stages, including those that do not require movement through flagella.
Malaria parasite is a protozoan.
No, Plasmodium falciparum, the parasite that causes malaria, does not have flagella. It has a specialized organelle called the apical complex, which helps it invade host cells.
No, the parasite that causes malaria is not a type of euglenoid. The parasite that causes malaria is a type of protozoan.
Chickenpox is caused by a virus, and malaria is caused by a parasite.
Malaria is a protist that is a deadly parasite.
Antigen test for malaria parasite and peripheral smear for malarial parasite.
Parasite
Mosquitos transfer the parasite that causes malaria.
Mosquitos
no
No, only the male gamete has a flagellum and it's only for motility during it's gametic stage.
false, not euglenoid, parasite