active transport, the water is pushed out through contractile vacuoles against its natural flow. Osmosis states that water flows from a higher concentration to a lower concentration, but the paramecium has less water and water is still being pushed out.
Paramecium expels excess water by contracting its contractile vacuole, a specialized structure that accumulates and pumps out water from the cell. This helps maintain the proper internal environment and osmotic balance within the cell.
The contractile vacuole in a paramecium helps maintain homeostasis by regulating the water content within the cell. It collects excess water that enters the cell through osmosis and expels it to prevent the cell from bursting. This process helps the paramecium maintain its internal water balance and survive in various environments.
A unicellular paramecium gets rid of its excess water through a contractile vacuole, which pumps out the excess water to maintain proper cell volume. This process requires energy because the cell needs to actively transport the water out against its concentration gradient.
Contractile vacuoles in Paramecium function to pump excess water out of the cell to maintain proper water balance. These vacuoles accumulate water from the surrounding environment and then contract to expel it, preventing the cell from bursting due to osmotic pressure.
The contractile vacuole of a paramecium is active in environments with low water salinity or high water concentration, where excess water needs to be removed to prevent the cell from bursting or undergoing lysis due to osmotic stress.
Paramecium expels excess water by contracting its contractile vacuole, a specialized structure that accumulates and pumps out water from the cell. This helps maintain the proper internal environment and osmotic balance within the cell.
contractile vacuole
The contractile vacuole in a paramecium helps maintain homeostasis by regulating the water content within the cell. It collects excess water that enters the cell through osmosis and expels it to prevent the cell from bursting. This process helps the paramecium maintain its internal water balance and survive in various environments.
it pumps water into the cells
A pair of contractile vacuoles.
A unicellular paramecium gets rid of its excess water through a contractile vacuole, which pumps out the excess water to maintain proper cell volume. This process requires energy because the cell needs to actively transport the water out against its concentration gradient.
Contractile vacuoles in Paramecium function to pump excess water out of the cell to maintain proper water balance. These vacuoles accumulate water from the surrounding environment and then contract to expel it, preventing the cell from bursting due to osmotic pressure.
The contractile vacuole of a paramecium is active in environments with low water salinity or high water concentration, where excess water needs to be removed to prevent the cell from bursting or undergoing lysis due to osmotic stress.
By osmosis
Water is constantly coming down it's concentrations gradient and osmotically entering the paramecium's cell. The cell would soon burst if there were not a way to offload much of this water, so contractile vacuoles do this job for the paramecium.
Paramecium (Paramecium tetraurelia) is a very large eukaryotic cell
I'm not sure about other Protozoans but Paramecium, a freshwater ciliate, pumps out excess water with it's Contractile Vacuoles.