Science, asked by ambika01031982, 4 months ago

chlamydomonas is a unicellular organism​

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Answered by Princess5259
1

Answer:

Chlamydomonas are single-celled organisms with two apical flagella, which they use for sensory transduction and for moving around in a wet environment (Figure 2F). But Chlamydomonas unicells don't always have these flagella.

Chlamydomonas has long been billed as a model plant - it requires very little space for growth, has a short generation time compared with higher plants, the nuclear and chloroplast genomes have been sequenced and annotated, and new genes can be introduced into both these genomes by transformation.

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