No, Amoebas Are not part of the plant world they are the simplest form of life on the planet and do not have the structures required for photosynthesis.
Amoebas do not have plant-like features; they are unicellular organisms classified as protists. Unlike plants, which have cell walls, chloroplasts for photosynthesis, and a defined structure, amoebas exhibit a flexible cell membrane and can change shape. They obtain nutrients through phagocytosis, engulfing food particles rather than producing their own energy through photosynthesis. Therefore, while both amoebas and plants are essential to their ecosystems, they possess fundamentally different characteristics and functions.
No, amoebas do not have chlorophyll. Amoebas are single-celled organisms that obtain their nutrients by engulfing and digesting other organisms or organic matter through a process called phagocytosis. Chlorophyll is a pigment found in plants and some photosynthetic organisms that is essential for photosynthesis, a process that produces energy using sunlight.
The amoebas are in the protista kingdom.
Amoebas reproduce asexually
yes
Amoebas eat by wrapping their bodies around their food and chlamydomonas eat by photosynthesis.
No, amoebas do not have chlorophyll. Amoebas are single-celled organisms that obtain their nutrients by engulfing and digesting other organisms or organic matter through a process called phagocytosis. Chlorophyll is a pigment found in plants and some photosynthetic organisms that is essential for photosynthesis, a process that produces energy using sunlight.
Amoebas are classified as protists.
Amoebas live because god made them.
The amoebas are in the protista kingdom.
Amoebas reproduce asexually
Amoebas live in the water with frogs. The relationship between amoebas and frog intestines, is that certain amoebas can be found feeding off of the intestines of the frog.
moving
Yes .
water
mitosis
unicellular