A paramecium is a small one celled (unicellular) living organism that can move, digest food, and reproduce. They belong to the kingdom of Protista, which is a group (family) of similar living micro-organisms. Micro-organism means they are a very small living cell.
Algae: any of numerous groups of chlorophyll-containing, mainly aquatic eukaryotic organisms ranging from microscopic single-celled forms to multicellular forms 100 feet (30 meters) or more long, distinguished from plants by the absence of true roots, stems, and leaves and by a lack of nonreproductive cells in the reproductive structures: classified into the six phyla Euglenophyta, Crysophyta, Pyrrophyta, Chlorophyta, Phaeophyta, and Rhodophyta.
Amboeda: any of a large genus (Amoeba) of naked rhizopod protozoans with lobed and never anastomosing pseudopodia, without permanent organelles or supporting structures, and of wide distribution in fresh and salt water and moist terrestrial environments
Asexual reproduction: reproduction (as cell division, spore formation, fission, or budding) without union of individuals or gametes
Cilia: minute short hairlike process often forming part of a fringe
Diatom: any of a class (Bacillariophyceae) of minute planktonic unicellular or colonial algae with silicified skeletons that form diatomaceous earth
Please mark brainliest
C<span>hloroplasts, which are only found in plants, give plants the green color because chlorophyll, a green pigment that helps in photosynthesis, is located inside of them</span>
The inside surface area is shaped in a crescent. It consists of a spiral valve which is made up of the small intestine. Although the dogfish shark has a relatively short small intestine compared to other animals, therefore, the spiral valve allows for a more compact form of the small intestine.
Hence, this structure provides maximum surface area over a relatively short distance in order to make the absorption of nutrients efficient achieved from the food, the sharks had from eating different sea animals.
Answer:
A nurse observes a few small, yellow nodules on the cervix of a client during the speculum exam. They are not painful or odorous, and a thin, clear discharge is present. The nurse recognizes that these are most indicative of nabothian cysts.
Explanation:
Nabothian cysts or nabothian follicles are also called mucinous retention cysts or epithelial cysts. It is a mucus-filled cyst on the surface of the cervix. Many women have multiple cysts they are common, benign and considered a normal feature of the adult cervix. They may be translucent or opaque, whitish to yellow, and range from a few millimeters to 3 to 4 cm in diameter. They are most often caused when stratified squamous epithelium of the ectocervix which is the nearest portion to the vagina that grows over the simple columnar epithelium of the endocervix which is the nearest portion to the uterus.
There are no serious complications or threat to your health with nabothian cysts.