By definition, no. Organs are groups of cells that perform a function. Each organ will have specialized cells that perform different tasks.
No, tissues and organs are made from cells
No, they are called "organelles" in a single celled organism. "Organs" are multi-celled structures with specific functions.
No, butterflies are not single-celled organisms. They are complex insects with multiple cells organized into tissues and organs, allowing them to carry out various functions such as flying, feeding, and reproducing.
single celled,it's a bacteria duh!
No, arachnids are not single-celled organisms. Arachnids are a class of joint-legged invertebrates that include spiders, scorpions, ticks, and mites. They consist of multiple cells organized into tissues and organs.
Streptococcus is single-celled.
One way that single-celled organisms are different from multi-celled organisms is in their complexity. Single-celled organisms consist of just one cell, while multi-celled organisms are made up of multiple cells organized into specialized tissues, organs, and systems. This allows multi-celled organisms to perform more complex functions and have greater structural and functional diversity.
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
Is a arachnids a single or multi celled
Bacteria are single-celled organisms.
The amoebae is a single celled protist.
Multi because they are living and breathing. Something like a rock would be single celled.