Most are unicellular except for the filamentous species.
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
yes
I think it actually depends on the type of bacteria.
Multicellular means multiple cells. Organisms that have more than one cell are Multicellular Or. The new bacteria was multicellular
eukarya
no...bird's are not single celled
Bacteria, yeast, and amoebas are all examples of non-multicellular organisms.
no, any kind of bacteria is unicellular
The kingdom of bacteria is unicellular, meaning that bacteria are made up of a single cell.
Most of the bacteria are unicellular but a few are multicellular.
Mosses are part of the plant kingdom and are not unicellular
none :) a bacteria is considered to be unicellular but there are many bacteria that live in clusters or are filamentous, in that case the intercellular interaction is more important and we can in a way see that as a multicellular organism. Theoretically a bacteria is unicellular , always !!