Many are only 10-20 μm in size, Amoeba proteus may reach 800 μm in length.
30 feet wide on the sea floorthat is an amoeba from Dungeons and Dragons.there is Gromia sphaerica the size of a grape, and Pelomyxa palustris that can reach 5 millimeters across. but usually they are smaller than 0.1mm.
No. Amoeba is the simplest microscopic unicellular cell whereas elephant is the largest mammal (which is a multicellular organism)
The giant amoeba is 5000 times larger than the smallest bacterium. This is calculated by dividing the size of the giant amoeba (1000 micrometers) by the size of the smallest bacterium (0.2 micrometers).
The euglena is much smaller compared to the paramecium, its less than half the size of one paramecium.
an amoeba is 0.5 mm as big as a grain of salt
The average size of an amoeba is 220-740 micrometers.
10-20um
30 feet wide on the sea floorthat is an amoeba from Dungeons and Dragons.there is Gromia sphaerica the size of a grape, and Pelomyxa palustris that can reach 5 millimeters across. but usually they are smaller than 0.1mm.
No. Amoeba is the simplest microscopic unicellular cell whereas elephant is the largest mammal (which is a multicellular organism)
An amoeba is much larger than an air particle. Amoebas can range in size from 20 to 1000 micrometers in diameter, while air particles are typically around 0.5 micrometers or smaller. This size comparison means that an amoeba is thousands of times larger than an air particle.
The giant amoeba is 5000 times larger than the smallest bacterium. This is calculated by dividing the size of the giant amoeba (1000 micrometers) by the size of the smallest bacterium (0.2 micrometers).
The euglena is much smaller compared to the paramecium, its less than half the size of one paramecium.
an amoeba is 0.5 mm as big as a grain of salt
it is so small and u cannot see it with mere observation . We need microscope to see it in such situation how can we find the size
cells are in a amoeba
The average size of a person is there is no average size we are all different;)
No, The Amoeba is a ciliate