How many vacuole does an amoeba can have at a time?
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An amoeba's single cell appears to be not much more than cytoplasm held together by a flexible cell membrane. Floating in this cytoplasm, several kinds of cell bodies can be found. The most easily identified is the nucleus. Some species have only one nucleus; others may have hundreds of nuclei.
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An amoeba, a single-celled organism lacking internal organs, is shown approaching a much smaller paramecium, which it begins to engulf with large outflowings of its cytoplasm, called pseudopodia.
The endoplasm contains food vacuoles, a granular nucleus, and a clear contractile vacuole. The amoeba has no mouth or anus; food is taken in and material excreted at any point on the cell surface.
There is no vacuole.
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An amoeba, a single-celled organism lacking internal organs, is shown approaching a much smaller paramecium, which it begins to engulf with large outflowings of its cytoplasm, called pseudopodia.
The endoplasm contains food vacuoles, a granular nucleus, and a clear contractile vacuole. The amoeba has no mouth or anus; food is taken in and material excreted at any point on the cell surface.
There is no vacuole.
Hope it helps..
Pls Mark it as a Brainlist...
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