Sperm cells possibly...are you sure there are only one?
A gamete is a reproductive cell with half the number of chromosomes as a normal body cell. In humans, sperm and eggs are examples of gametes. Sperm are typically small and flagellated, while eggs are larger and contain stored nutrients for potential fertilization.
No, angiosperms do not have flagellated sperm. Instead, they have non-flagellated sperms that are carried to the egg by pollen tubes during fertilization.
No, Gloeocapsa is a type of cyanobacteria that do not have flagella. They typically reproduce through cell division, not through flagellated movement.
Nothing, only plant cells have an actual cell wall.
Body cells undergo mitotic cell division so that each daughter cell is genetically identical to each parent cell and to all other body cells.
A flagellated cell that sweeps water through a sponge's body is called a choanocyte. Choanocytes have a flagellum that creates a current to bring water through the sponge's pores, allowing for filter feeding and gas exchange to occur within the sponge's body.
flagellated cell - any cell or one-celled organism equipped with a flagellumcell - (biology) the basic structural and functional unit of all organisms; they may exist as independent units of life (as in monads) or may form colonies or tissues as in higher plants and animals
Chytridiomycota are the only group of fungi that have a flagellated stage in their life cycle. The flagellated spores, called zoospores, help them to move through water and find new environments to colonize.
The majority of animal (Kingdom Animalia) cells are not technically flagellated. Flagella are defined as long, thread like structures that propel a cell by rotating (like a propeller). The only cells in the human body that are technically considered flagellated are spermatozoa (males only). However, eukaryotic flagella are structurally identical to cilia (differs only in length and mode of motion). Cilia produces motion by rhythmic beating rather than rotation. Many animal cells, therefore, are ciliated. Examples in the human body include ciliated cells lining the trachea where they are responsible for 'sweeping out' foreign material attached to the surface of the trachea, and cells lining the Fallopian tubes that use cilia to sweep along the ovum during the female reproductive cycle.
A gamete is a reproductive cell with half the number of chromosomes as a normal body cell. In humans, sperm and eggs are examples of gametes. Sperm are typically small and flagellated, while eggs are larger and contain stored nutrients for potential fertilization.
No, angiosperms do not have flagellated sperm. Instead, they have non-flagellated sperms that are carried to the egg by pollen tubes during fertilization.
No, Gloeocapsa is a type of cyanobacteria that do not have flagella. They typically reproduce through cell division, not through flagellated movement.
The whoo-seii-ga-ga cell obviously
No only plant cells have cell walls.
Nothing, only plant cells have an actual cell wall.
A specialized cell is a special cell that only has small tasks. They are only found in specific organs, so one cell does not travel throughout the body. In the human body, all of our cells are specialized cells. Hope this helps!
Body cells undergo mitotic cell division so that each daughter cell is genetically identical to each parent cell and to all other body cells.