Endocytosis
The process by which a membrane engulfs tiny droplets of liquid from its surroundings is called endocytosis. During endocytosis, the cell membrane surrounds the droplets, forming a vesicle that brings them into the cell. This process allows the cell to take in nutrients or other molecules from its environment.
Two pseudopodia are extended with microtubular action and surround the food particle. Instead of reeling the particle in the amoeba pulls itself up to the particle and then it is ingested through the cellular membrane.
Pinocytosis
Amoebas take in food particles by surrounding them with their cell membrane, forming a food vacuole. The food vacuole then fuses with lysosomes containing enzymes that digest the food into nutrients that can be absorbed by the cell. Once digestion is complete, the remaining waste is expelled from the cell.
surrounding it with its cell membrane, forming a food vacuole. The food vacuole then fuses with lysosomes containing digestive enzymes, which break down the food into nutrients that can be absorbed by the amoeba for energy.
surrounding the food with pseudopodia
Phagocytosis is the process by which a cell engulfs a large particle by extending pseudopodia around it and bringing it into the cell in a membrane-bound vesicle.
Cell Membrane The amoeba uses its cell membrane to form an arm-like structure (pseudopodia) to encircle food with its "arms" and engulfs it. Check the videos on youtube!
It extends from the cells body then engulfs the prey in to the cell, dissolving it and turning into nutrients
The process by which a membrane engulfs tiny droplets of liquid from its surroundings is called endocytosis. During endocytosis, the cell membrane surrounds the droplets, forming a vesicle that brings them into the cell. This process allows the cell to take in nutrients or other molecules from its environment.
Two pseudopodia are extended with microtubular action and surround the food particle. Instead of reeling the particle in the amoeba pulls itself up to the particle and then it is ingested through the cellular membrane.
Pinocytosis
Amoebas take in food particles by surrounding them with their cell membrane, forming a food vacuole. The food vacuole then fuses with lysosomes containing enzymes that digest the food into nutrients that can be absorbed by the cell. Once digestion is complete, the remaining waste is expelled from the cell.
surrounding it with its cell membrane, forming a food vacuole. The food vacuole then fuses with lysosomes containing digestive enzymes, which break down the food into nutrients that can be absorbed by the amoeba for energy.
The amoebae extends two pseudopodia by microtubule extension and surrounds the bacterial prey, then, instead of reeling in the prey, the amoebae drags itself up to the trapped bacteria and then engulfs it by a form of phagocytosis. There the bacteria is digested by many different enzymes designed for the job.
An amoeba engulfs its food through a process called phagocytosis. It extends its cell membrane to form pseudopodia (false feet) that surround and envelop the food particle, creating a food vacuole. The amoeba then secretes enzymes to digest the food within the vacuole. Unfortunately, I can't provide a diagram, but you can visualize it as an amoeba stretching out its membrane around a piece of food, enclosing it in a bubble-like structure.
The fluid surrounding the cell is called interstitial fluid. The fluid inside the plasma membrane of the cell is called cytoplasm.The fluid surrounding the cell can also be called "Extracellular fluid". Also, the fluid inside the plasma membrane can also be called "cytosol"