No. Protists are a general group for eukaryotic organisms that are not plants, animals, or fungi. As eukaryotes, protists have a cellular nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Bacteria are prokaryotes and lake a nucleus or organelles and are generally simpler.
Yes, Protista is a kingdom of eukaryotic organisms, and protists are the individual organisms that belong to this kingdom. So, while Protista refers to a specific taxonomic grouping, protists are the diverse group of single-celled and multicellular organisms within that kingdom.
No, protista is not a bacteria. Protista is a kingdom that includes diverse microorganisms like algae, protozoa, and slime molds. Bacteria belong to a separate kingdom called Bacteria.
They are not. Bacteria and Protista are in different domains.
There is no such thing as a bacterium with a nucleus. Single-celled organisms with a nucleus are in the kingdom protista.
They are not. Bacteria and Protista are in different domains.
All unicellular eukaryotic organisms fall under the kingdom Protista and are thusly called "protists."
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
bacteria?
I think so! I asked the same thing!
I think so! I asked the same thing!
Any type of bacteria
Protista-Apex