they moved by tiny hair projeotion called cilia
Chat with our AI personalities
Members of the Phylum Ciliophora move using cilia, which are short, hair-like structures covering their surface. These cilia beat in coordinated patterns to create movement by either propelling the organism through the water or generating feeding currents to capture food particles.
Cilia are not classified under a specific phylum. Instead, cilia are microscopic, hair-like organelles found on the surface of many types of cells across various phyla, including Ciliophora and other organisms like mammals.
Dileptus species are eukaryotes. They belong to the phylum Ciliophora, which includes diverse ciliated protozoans that are all eukaryotic organisms with membrane-bound organelles.
Deuteromycota is a group of fungi known as imperfect fungi because they lack a known sexual reproduction stage. They reproduce asexually through spores or fragmentation. Many members of Deuteromycota are important plant pathogens.
Animal-like protists are classified into phyla such as Sarcomastigophora, Ciliophora, Apicomplexa, and Microspora. Sarcomastigophora are characterized by flagella or pseudopods for movement, Ciliophora possess cilia for locomotion and feeding, Apicomplexa have apical complex structures for penetration into host cells, and Microspora are spore-forming parasites with reduced organelles. Each phylum exhibits unique features in terms of locomotion, reproduction, and parasitic adaptations.
The phylum of a primrose is Magnoliophyta, which includes all flowering plants.