Cilia are typically found on animal cells and are involved in movement and sensing in various organisms. Plant cells do not have cilia but may have flagella for certain functions.
centrioles, lysosomes, cilia or flagella
Cilia and flagella
no only animal and protists have cilia
cilia cilia is wrong. The correct answer is microvilli. cilia is more for movement
Cilia are typically found on animal cells and are involved in movement and sensing in various organisms. Plant cells do not have cilia but may have flagella for certain functions.
it is in a plant cell
neither. cilia are sometimes in animal cell i think, but i think that theyre just parts of protists. plant cells wouldnt really need them.
Provide movement for microorganisms.
centrioles, lysosomes, cilia or flagella
Animal cells have a lysosomes that are not present and cilia that are rarely seen in plant cells. The lysosomes are the recycling and disposal site in the animal cell. The cilia help the cell move.
A ciliated cell is typically found in animal cells, where cilia are important for various functions like movement and sensing the environment. Plant cells do not have cilia, but they have other structures like flagella for similar purposes.
Cilia does not have any form of a cell. It is merely an organelle of a cell.
No. Cilia are not found in plant cells.
The cell structure is useful in determining if an animal or a plant. A plant has chloroplast, a central vacuole, cellulose and a cell wall, giving it a sort of square shape. An animal cell has lysosome, centrioles and cilia.
Eukaryotic cilia and flagella are cell surfaceprojections familiar to ....
Many bacterias and some eukaryotic cells have cilia.