Information on these organisms, often called slipper animalcules, their classification, with links to videos, images and many other sites on protists. * www.101science.com/paramecium.htm
are protozoa and amoeba the same
wag kayo magtanong sakin kasi di ko rin alam!
It is the same colour usually. It all depends on the time of day and weather.
An amoeba replicates by splitting in half asexually so that each daughter cell is the same as the parent. Running this process backward from the present, each existing amoeba is the same as its predecessor (fungible) back as far in time as the first amoeba existed. In this regard the amoeba is immortal. Now it get a bit picky. The above assumes that no genetic changes have occurred since amoeba #1. This cannot be proved. Replication errors, chromosome damage by radiation etc may have happened to create slightly better or worse (at least different) amoebas that are the ancestors of all amoebas today. The term "immortal" needs some thought to. No individual amoeba is necessarily immortal. Each amoeba can be killed. Only the amoeba pattern is immortal so far. Then there is the Star Trek transporter problem. When Kirk is transported he is destroyed at the sending end and reconstituted at the receiving end. Is he the same Kirk? Amoebas are the same. The "mother" amoeba is essentially destroyed as it divides to create the daughters. Do the daughters share all the learnings of the mother? or would they see themselves as unique?
amoebas are single celled organisms-1 cell
the main colour of amoeba is blue
pink
are protozoa and amoeba the same
No.
NO
No they are not the same color
The amoeba finds tiny particles of organic matter, and eats them. All animals get energy in essentially the same way, by eating food. The food can then be used as fuel for the metabolism.
Not are all the same. As you can see each bridge has a different colour but some look the same.
no they don't
No,they have different kind of colour
No, they come in different colours.
Since all amoebas asexually reproduce, they are all the same age, and thus they are all as old as the first amoeba to ever exist on Earth.