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- https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Evergreen_Valley_College/BIO_Majors_4A_4B_Lab_Manual_2023/23%3A_Protist_Diversity/23.02%3A_ExerciseProcedure Live Specimens Make wet mount slides of the live specimens we have in lab. You may want to make one slide at a time and view each one, so you can see the moving organisms. Amoeba Paramecium ...Procedure Live Specimens Make wet mount slides of the live specimens we have in lab. You may want to make one slide at a time and view each one, so you can see the moving organisms. Amoeba Paramecium Pond water (this will contain many organisms, some of which are protists and some are not) Fill out the table below. Organism, Supergroup Mode of motility Preserved Specimens and Slides View the available specimens in lab, and fill out the table below. Organism Supergroup Characteristics Drawing
- https://bio.libretexts.org/Courses/Evergreen_Valley_College/BIO_Majors_4A_4B_Lab_Manual_2023/23%3A_Protist_Diversity/23.03%3A_Lab_ReportFill out the table below. Organism, Supergroup Mode of motility Preserved Specimens and Slides View the available specimens in lab, and fill out the table below. Organism Supergroup Characteristics Dr...Fill out the table below. Organism, Supergroup Mode of motility Preserved Specimens and Slides View the available specimens in lab, and fill out the table below. Organism Supergroup Characteristics Drawing 23.2: Exercise(opens in new window) is shared under a not declared (opens in new window) license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.
- https://bio.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Botany/Inanimate_Life_(Briggs)/02%3A_Organisms/2.19%3A_Euglena-_a_unicellular_algaeEuglena is a genus of unicellular, freshwater organisms that are very common in ponds and small bodies of water, especially if they are rich in nutrients and consequently high in algae (aka 'pond scum...Euglena is a genus of unicellular, freshwater organisms that are very common in ponds and small bodies of water, especially if they are rich in nutrients and consequently high in algae (aka 'pond scum' ). Euglena itself is sometimes photosynthetic and is a component of the green sludge in such ponds. But at other times it is non-photosynthetic and is a component of the diverse group of organisms that are eating the green sludge or perhaps eating the other things that eat the green sludge.