Yes. They are a saprotrophic fungi, similar to yeast. Mycelium (mushrooms, toadstools etc) are not.
No, mold is not a fungus. Mold is a certain type of phototrophic Prostist (found in Domain Protista) that form unicellular colonies. In a unicellular colony all of the cells that form the group are the same. Mold is very similar to seaweed (also a protist) in this manner.
Bread mould is multicellular.
Slime mold can be unicellular or multicellular
Plasmodium, from the genus plasmodium, as in those organisms which cause Malaria are unicellular organisms. Plasmodium, as in part of the life cycle of a slim mold, can be either acellular, in which multiple nuclei are encased by a single membrane, making them "unicellular" or they can be cellular, in which they have multiple cells and in a way are "multicellular." So they techincally can be both depending on the type of slim mold.
Slime molds are multinucleated cellular organisms .
Slime mold
Slime mold
No, mold is has several cells.
Euglenas are unicellular protists.
Yeast, mold, bacteria, unicellular organisms.
Amoeba is unicellular.
Yes, diatoms are unicellular