Protista (Amoeba)
The amoeba is a tiny, one-celled organism. You need a
microscope to see most amoebas - the largest are only about 1 mm across.
Amoebas live in fresh water (like puddle and ponds), in salt water, in wet
soil, and in animals (including people). There are many different types of
amoebas. The name amoeba comes from the Greek word amoibe, which means change.
(Amoeba is sometimes spelled ameba.)
Anatomy

cell membrane - the thin layer of protein
and fat that surrounds the amoeba; it allows some substances to pass into the
cell, and blocks other substances.
contractile
vacuole - a
cavity within the amoeba that excretes excess water and waste; the waste is
brought to the cell membrane and is then eliminated from the amoeba.
cytoplasm
(ectoplasm and endoplasm) - a jelly-like material that fills most of the cell; the organelles
(like the nucleus) are surrounded by cytoplasm.
food vacuole - a cavity within the
amoeba in which food is digested (broken down in order to be absorbed by the
amoeba).
nucleus - the major organelle of
the amoeba, located centrally; it controls reproduction (it contains the
chromosomes) and many other important functions (including eating and growth).
pseudopods - temporary
"feet" that the amoeba uses to move around and to engulf food.
An amoeba consists
of a single blobby cell surrounded by a porous cell membrane. The amoeba
"breathes" using this membrane - oxygen gas from the water passes in
to the amoeba through the cell membrane and carbon dioxide gas leaves through
it. A complex, jelly-like series of folded membranes called cytoplasm fills
most of the cell. A large, disk-shaped nucleus within the amoeba controls the
growth and reproduction of the amoeba.
Diet
Amoebas eat algae,
bacteria, plant cells, and microscopic protozoa and metazoa - some amoebas are
parasites. They eat by surrounding tiny particles of food with pseudopods,
forming a bubble-like food vacuole. The food vacuole digests the food. Wastes
and excess water are transported outside the cell by contractile vacuoles.

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. Once the paramecium is completely engulfed, a
primitive digestive cavity, called a vacuole, forms around it. In the vacuole,
acids break the paramecium down into chemicals that the amoeba can diffuse back
into its cytoplasm for nourishment.
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Amoeba proteus is busy capturing a ciliate by surrounding it with its pseudopodia. The nucleus can be seen just below the pseudopodia. Bottom left is a water expelling contractile vacuole. |
Amoeba eating a paramecium

The amoeba heads
toward the It begins
to spread out it's body to catch its prey.
The amoeba keeps changing its shape
unsuspecting paramecium. until it can
enclose its prey.

The paramecium will soon be
The amoeba will absorb its lunch
completely inside the amoeba! directly inside its cell walls.
Watch an amoeba eat a paramecium
that is almost as large as itself!
See more MOVIES of amoeba eating:
Amoeba
eating movie 1 Amoeba
eating movie 2 Amoeba
eating movie 3
See Movies of amoeba moving Amoeba
moving video 1 Amoeba
moving video 2 Amoeba
moving video 3