The paramecium would eventually die because the paramecium wouldn't get any water and without the water-expelling vesicle the paramecium can't get the water out without getting other bacterias while doing so.
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If the water-expelling vesicle in a paramecium stopped working, the cell would not be able to regulate its internal water balance effectively. This could lead to the cell taking in too much water, resulting in swelling or even bursting due to osmotic pressure.
If the water-expelling vesicle stoped working, the paramecium cannot get rid of the extra water. The extra water will overflow the paramecium, so the paramecium will keep on swelling and then explode. ;-)
Contractile vacuoles helps the unicellular organisms to gain water by the process endosmosis. For eg-amoeba. If there will be no contractile vacuoles then the organism willl not be able to gain water
Paramecium as in the little cilia organism? it would probably die after a short time.
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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.
No, a paramecium is a single-celled organism classified as a protist. It is unicellular and does not have specialized cells that form tissues or organs, making it different from multicellular organisms.
ATP production will be decreased critically. Cell will run out of energy
Chloroplasts are doing photosynthesis. They will die if chloroplasts are not working.