A sea star is multicellular.
Mostly multicellular: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi. Mostly unicellular: Protista.
The 5 kingdoms are fungi, plante, eubacteria, protista, and animalia. But only 3 out of the 5 are multicellular. The three kingdoms that are multicellular are: 1) fungi 2) animalia 3) plante
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.
The five kingdom classification system groups organisms into five kingdoms based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. These kingdoms are: Monera (bacteria), Protista (unicellular eukaryotes), Fungi (multicellular decomposers), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular heterotrophs).
A zygote is unicellular.
No, muticellular.
Unicellular, no nucleus visible, bacteria :Monera , unicellular organisms, eukaryotic, amoeba :Protista , Motile, heterotrophic, multicellular, cat :Animalia , Sessile, autotrophic, multicellular, rose :Plantae
Actually amoeba and paramecium is protista. Animalia (animals) is actually human, fish and etc that cannot produce their own food (heterotroph) and multicellular. Amoeba is unicellular but still heterotroph. Protista can be autotroph or hetorotroph. But animalia is only heterotroph.
Cows are Multicellular organisms. Hope you Like it!.
Halophiles are multicellular.
No. Protists are unicellular, or unicellular organisms which form multicellular structures. Arthropods, including insects, spiders, crabs, lobsters, etc., clearly aren't unicellular. They belong to the kingdom animalia.
Mostly multicellular: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi. Mostly unicellular: Protista.
The 5 kingdoms are fungi, plante, eubacteria, protista, and animalia. But only 3 out of the 5 are multicellular. The three kingdoms that are multicellular are: 1) fungi 2) animalia 3) plante
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.
it is unicellular.
Most are multicellular, but some are unicellular
The five kingdom classification system groups organisms into five kingdoms based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. These kingdoms are: Monera (bacteria), Protista (unicellular eukaryotes), Fungi (multicellular decomposers), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular heterotrophs).