Yes, Multi cellular can live in colony.
E.g. Jelly Fish, Sea Anemone, ObeliaColony
Colonial organisms have some of the same characteristics of multicellular organisms. The difference between a multicellular organism and a colonial organism is that individual organisms from a colony can survive on their own, while cells from a multicellular organism cannot.
Yes, Pandorina is a multicellular green algae. It is composed of a colony of individual cells that work together in a coordinated manner. Each cell in the colony performs a specific function to ensure the survival and reproduction of the organism.
If you are talking about a Volvox, they have already evolved into a multicellular colony.
Where there is free oxygen available.
Sponges lack specialized tissues and organs found in multicellular organisms. Instead, they are made up of a loose aggregation of different cell types that work together in a coordinated manner. Each cell in a sponge can potentially survive on its own, making sponges more akin to a colony of cells rather than a true multicellular organism.
Yes honey bee's are known to live in a colony.
the British colony of Jamestown
No!
No.
they wanted them to live
No, There is no division of Labour among the cells of a colony.
Scientists say Stop Cheating! If it didn't live in a colony it would be dead.