No the cell theory also applied for unicellular organisms such as bacteria, amoeba. The cells are all coming from their preexisting cells, they are the unit of their life and does their life functions.
Yes, because they are both living.
Yes
No, bacteria have much smaller cells, generally, than plants and animals.
Nonliving things are not made of cells.
he discovered that all animals have cells
Very few cells reproduce. that's the best answervery few cells reproduce
Spores are highly resistant forms of bacterial cells.
ribosomes :)
No, bacteria have much smaller cells, generally, than plants and animals.
Ummm . . . bacteria are animals, too. They are one-celled, while most other animals have a whole bunch of cells.
I did.
they nare smatr
The cells of plants and animals are extensively larger than the cells of bacteria. Animal cells average about 10 to 30 micrometers, plant cells between 10 and 100 micrometers while bacterial cells are 2 micrometers.
Nonliving things are not made of cells.
No. Cell theory is the idea that all living things are made of cells. Glaciers are not alive and do not have cells, so cell theory does not apply in any way whatsoever.
he discovered that all animals have cells
prokaryotic cells does not have nuclear membrane surrounded DNA, a characteristic of only bacterial cells.
No, plants and animals both are composed of cells
no, bacterial cells do not have genetic material