Amoeba are single celled organisms, so the answer is one cell.
Although they are single celled organisms, they still belong to the Eukaryotic domain as they have a membrane-bound nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
An amoeba has only one cell. It is known as a unicellular organism.
One. The amoeba is the largest single celled organism.
An amoeba is unicellular
an amoeba is a one celled organism
it has 1 cell
one
25
21
500-50,000 individual cells
Yes, they are.
Penguins have many cells which make up tissues. They also have many tissues which make up organs. Penguins are multi-cellular.
The amoeba takes in food "through their skin." In the case of amoebas, of course, having only one cell, they don't have the kind of skin we do, which is made up of many layers of cells. The surface of the amoeba, like all individual cells, is called a membrane, and it's actually a double layer of fat like molecules that separate the stuff inside the cell from what's outside. But embedded in this membrane are many hundreds of specialized molecules made of proteins and sugars that cover most of the surface. Some of these go right through the membrane to the inside and are connected to a complicated bit of machinery that can change the shape of parts of the ameba's surface.
millions of cells
no. an amoeba cell is a unicellular organism, which means that it is only made up of one cell
Because we are made of millions of cells while an amoeba is just one cell. Large organisms made of many cells need solid supports to stand up.
No, an amoeba is ONE cell.
Because an amoeba is a single celled organism and single cells do not contain blood (which is itself made up of millions of cells).
amoeba Blepharisma
trillions
8
21
The relationship between cells,organs, and systems would be many cells make up tissue, many tissues make up an organ, many organs make up an organ system, and organ systems make up and organism.
Nope. Organisms like amoeba are made up of a single cell.
500-50,000 individual cells