the red eyespot and the flagellum
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
No you can't eat a paramecium because it is a oragin Actually, you can but you'd just get sick really sick.
paramecium use motile cells/hairs called cillia to swim as it were.ameboea use a form of locomotion.that is it heaves part of it self forward and pulls it self along.on amicroscopic scale this system of motion works in liquids.
In Amoeba, digestion occurs in the food vacuoles, where enzymes break down food particles into simpler substances that can be absorbed by the cell. In Paramecium, digestion happens in food vacuoles as well. Food particles are engulfed by cilia, forming a food vacuole that fuses with lysosomes to digest the food using enzymes.
Food engulfing part
three ways protozoans move are cilia, pushing out part of their bodys called pseudopod, and flagella.
No you can't eat a paramecium because it is a oragin Actually, you can but you'd just get sick really sick.
paramecium use motile cells/hairs called cillia to swim as it were.ameboea use a form of locomotion.that is it heaves part of it self forward and pulls it self along.on amicroscopic scale this system of motion works in liquids.
The psuedopod is used to help the amoeba move, and also to eat. It is a part of the amoeba's body that it can stretch out and pull itself with.
In Amoeba, digestion occurs in the food vacuoles, where enzymes break down food particles into simpler substances that can be absorbed by the cell. In Paramecium, digestion happens in food vacuoles as well. Food particles are engulfed by cilia, forming a food vacuole that fuses with lysosomes to digest the food using enzymes.
Food engulfing part
Why is the amoeba considered an outgroup in this cladogram?
are protozoa and amoeba the same
cilia
The flagellum found in a euglena is also found in some animal cells. The flagellum helps with movement by propelling the cell through its environment.
Paramecium are not known to cause illness in humans. They are single-celled organisms commonly found in freshwater environments and are part of the planktonic community. While there are parasitic organisms related to Paramecium that can cause illness, Paramecium itself is not pathogenic to humans.
No, but euglena is part animal (it can move around) and part plant (it can make its own food.) It is a single-celled organism.