Not by the definition of tissue. Tissue is a group of specialized cells with a dedicated purpose that usually leads to organs. Unicellular organisms can not have tissue because they would need more than the one cell.
No, tissues and organs are made from cells
No. Tissues are aggregations of multiple cells, which do not occur in single-celled organisms.
Tissues are made of cells that are all the same type and one cell can't be a tissue.
No. Tissues are multiple cell structures.
Yes
Why yes, a single celled organism can contain tissue. The Armillaria ostoyae, popularly known as the honey mushroom, is one of the worlds largest living organisms and it is made up of alot of tissue, and is still considered a single cellular organism.
it will be in order cells, tissues, organs, and organism/ Sometimes an organism may be single celled as in case of number of microbes.
in many-celled organisms cells are organized into tissues, organs, and organ systems.
In many-celled organisms, cells are organized into tissues, which are groups of cells that work together to perform specific functions. Different tissues come together to form organs, which then work together as organ systems to carry out complex processes necessary for the organism's survival.
The five main levels of organization in many-celled organisms are cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, and the whole organism. Cells group together to form tissues, which work together to make up organs. Organs combine to form organ systems, which work together to support the entire organism.
a singe celled is a prokaryote and multi celled is a eukaryote
No; a single-celled organism is a unicellularoraganism I believe.