The axoneme of eukaryotic flagellum has
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Answers
Answer:
9 + 2 type of arrangement
Explanation:
for proks it is 9+0 type
Answer:
The origin of the eukaryotic flagellum (or cilium, terms referring to variants of essentially the same organelle) predates the radiation of known eukaryotes from a last common ancestor over a billion years ago (Roger and Simpson 2009). The presence of whip-like flagella or short, hair-like arrays of many cilia protruding from cell surfaces is a striking visual feature of many protists and animal cells (figure 1). Historically, distinguishing between a flagellum and a cilium was often made on the basis of organelle length (flagella are typically longer than cilia) or organelle number (many, often more than 100, cilia can be arrayed across a cell surface, whereas examples of eukaryotes with more than eight flagella are rare), but the defining architectural feature in these organelles is always a microtubule axoneme.