The overriding relationship here is that all these organisms are eukaryote. Membrane bound nucleus and many membrane bound organelles.
Yes and no, there are single celled Fungi (ex. Yeast) and in the kingdom protista (unicellular animals) there are many such as paramecium.
They are (outdated) kingdoms.
For the most part, no. Eukaryotes include plants animals and fungi. Plants and animals are multicellular and only a few fungi are unicellular such as yeast
Fungi are not plants.
Most plants are multicellular
fungi & animals
multicellular invertebrates
animals,plants,fungi
plants animals fungi and bugs!!
For the most part, no. Eukaryotes include plants animals and fungi. Plants and animals are multicellular and only a few fungi are unicellular such as yeast
Fungi and plants are multicellular.
Some Fungi can be multicellular and others can be unicellular. Their cell walls are chitin and fungi are also heterotrophs. Plants are only multicellular. Their cell walls are of cellulose and plants are autotrophs.
Fungi are unicellular or multicellular organisms with eukaryotic cell types. Prokaryote or Monera (comprised bacteria). Eukaryote (animals, plants, fungi and protists).
Bacteria tend to be single celled organisms.
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
Fungi are not plants.
Most plants are multicellular
fungi & animals
all organisms were classified as either plants or animals. The only domain with multicellular organisms is the domain Eukarya, which contains the 4 kingdoms Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Protista and Fungi are the only kingdoms that have both unicellular and multicellular organisms.