Some types are multicellular and some are unicellular.
The majority of species grow as multicellular filaments called hyphae forming a mycelium; some fungal species also grow as single cells.
Fungi can be multicellular or unicellular.
Some fungi are unicellular and some are multicellular.
There are an estimated 2-5 million species of fungi, and only 5% of that number have been formally classified. Of known species of fungi, most of the are multi-cellular.
It is both, single-celled and multicellular.
Fungi can be unicellular and/or multicellular; it depends on the type of fungus and what stage of its life cycle it is at.
Some are multicelluar and some are unicelluar.
Fungi are multicellular but few are unicellular
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
Yeast
It contains both. Kingdom Protista is a large and very diverse group of organisms and can live as unicellular, multicellular, and in some cases, colonial cells.
Fungi can be unicellular or multicellular and every fungus has a nucleus.
Fungi and Protista.
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
Sac Fungi are both unicellular and multicellular
No , most fungi are multicellular . , only yeast is unicellular
Yeast
yes they are also some fungi is yummy too!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A unicellular producer example :bacteria a multicellular consumer example: fungi
No,there are both unicellular and multicellular species
It depends on what kind of fungi you have, some species of fungi are unicellular and some species of fungi are multicellular.
Not all.Fungi are also decomposers.Most of fungi are multicellular.
I'm not sure about algae, but some fungi can become multicellular through budding
fungi are grouped into hypostotic groups causing the multicellular group to raise in uranus molecules