No.
No.
Jellyfish are single celled organisms.
No, theyre many celled. They are classified as animals.
There are over 200 species of Scyphozoa, about 50 species of Staurozoa, about 20 species of Cubozoa, and in Hydrozoa there are about 1000-1500 species that produce medusae (and many more hydrozoa species that do not).
A jellyfish is multicellular but it does depend on the time.
No, jellyfish are not protozoans. They are part of the phylum Cnidaria, which includes animals like jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones. Protozoans are single-celled organisms that belong to a different group in the classification of living organisms.
single celled,it's a bacteria duh!
Yes it is there are many examples of living organisms without brains such as single celled bacteria, jellyfish and plants
They're called foraminifera, single-celled protists that construct shells.
Streptococcus is single-celled.
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
Is a arachnids a single or multi celled