After a criminal's condemnation, it was the custom for a victim to be scourged with the flagellum, a whip with leather throngs. |
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The rotation of the flagellum propels the cell body in the same way that a screw propels a ship. |
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My quick survey of the antennal structure of extant odonates and mayflies indicates that the flagellum is structurally different. |
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The bacterial flagellum is composed of 11 protofilaments with each protofilament comprised of subunits of a single protein, flagellin. |
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One flagellum and most of the body of the penetrating microgamete had entered the macrogamete. |
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The single flagellum provides the bacteria with mobility and kinetic activity. |
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The article Fighting spam also briefly presents several methods for fighting this flagellum. |
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Intelligent design is an argument by inference, and the example that proponents dote upon is the bacterial flagellum. |
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The shear angle is the angle of intersection between the tangent to the waveform at position s and the tangent to the waveform at the base of the flagellum. |
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In the latter position, they seem to carry a whip, a flagellum, or a fly swatter on their shoulder. |
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The flagellum is a corkscrew-shaped, hair-like appendage attached to the cell surface, which acts like a propeller, allowing the bacterium to swim. |
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The bacterial flagellum is a molecular motor possessing the distinguishing characteristics of design. |
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The latter possess a single flagellum enabling them to move in soil water and reach the living host. |
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A longitudinal groove, the sulcus, extends from the annulus posteriorly to the point at which a second flagellum is attached. |
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The cell body is actually a cylinder capped at both ends by hemispheres and the radius of the flagellum helix is smaller than that of the cell body. |
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Development of the spermatid flagellum begins immediately after meiosis. |
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Recent findings indicate that the parasite is unable to survive in the bloodstream without its flagellum. |
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This cylinder of nine triplets, constituting the basal body, anchors the flagellum in the cell membrane. |
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The flagellum is attached at its base to a basal body in the cell membrane. |
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The monster is holding two objects: a shield in the right hand and a whip or flagellum in the left hand, sometimes replaced with a staff. |
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They are far from static, indeed they can move about thanks to a cilium, a flagellum or some other kind of outgrowth on their bodies. |
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They have a single polar flagellum at one or both ends of the cell. |
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The flagellum is then lost and the zoospore penetrates the host cell. |
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The longitudinal flagellum is relatively conventional in appearance, with few or no hairs. |
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The sixth stage has a segmented inner flagellum of the antennule and fully developed pleopods with setae. |
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In some Pasteuria strains, the daughter buds have a flagellum and are motile, whereas the mother cells lack flagella but have long pili and holdfast appendages at the end opposite the bud. |
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Moreover, A flagellum does not co-occur with A narutobiei. |
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Most cells are non-motile, but some have a single polar flagellum. |
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The pathogen is a non-sporing, aerobic, motile, Gram-negative rod, occurring singly or in pairs, 0.4-0.8 x 1.0-2.5 nm, with a single polar flagellum. |
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The most expanded use of habitats was by the coachwhip Masticophis flagellum. |
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The middle of the flagellum, the base of the abdominal segments, and the outer side of the mid and hind tibiae are infuscate or black colored, as are the wings. |
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Their flagellum is more evolved than that of prokaryotes. |
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Strangely, it has also been classified as an animal because of its ability to move independently with a single flagellum, and its conspicuous red eyespot. |
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In oarlike flagellar movements, which are also planar, the waves tend to be highly asymmetrical, of greater side to side swing, and the protozoan usually rotates and moves with the flagellum at the forward end. |
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Either structure improves the effectiveness of the flagellar stroke, altering the movement of water produced by undulations of the flagellum by reversing its flow toward the flagellar base. |
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The flagellum is a molecular motor used by microscopic organisms, such as bacteria and protozoans, to propel themselves through an aqueous medium. |
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The flagellum arises from the basal body, or kinetosome, within the cell. |
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The base of the flagellum is anchored to the cell by a basal body. |
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In the presence of ATP, dynein molecules are activated, and the flagellum bends as dynein arms on one side of a dynein cross-bridge become activated and move up the microtubule. |
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It feeds on other plankton, living or dead, flushing food into its gullet with a flick of its flagellum. |
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However, the archaellum is rotating and thereby functionally resembles the bacterial flagellum. |
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This isoenzyme plays an important role in the process of glycolysis and ATP production in sperm flagellum and, sperm motility. |
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Euglenoids have green chloroplasts and one flagellum for locomotion. |
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Rattan is a liane of the palm family that requires trees for support. The flagellum at the tip of its leaves has hooks allowing it to climb trees. |
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The initial infection-spreading cells of the fungus, called zoospores, swim by lashing a hair-like flagellum and don't have a cell wall. |
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However, the mechanism of attachment may be redundant, and another molecule on the promastigote flagellum may be involved. |
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Behavioral and electrophysiological experiments suggest that the antennular outer flagellum is the site of pheromone reception in the male helmet crab Telmessus cheiragonus. |
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Plumose setae and aesthetascs are present on the peduncle, and simple setae on the antennular flagellum were noted, from stage I larvae to adults. |
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The transverse flagellum is a wavy ribbon in which only the outer edge undulates from base to tip, due to the action of the axoneme which runs along it. |
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Masticophis flagellum Often six feet or longer and very fast. |
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