Yes fungus cells are eucaryotic so are algae and protozoa they all belong to the Domain Eucarya.
Fungus are eukaryotic organisms.So they have normal eukaryotic organells
Eukaryotic cells are in cells in the Domain of Eukarya, which includes the kingdoms of Plantae (plants) Animalia (animals, thus humans too) Fungi (Fungus) and Protists. Therefore, a human check cell and a dogs check cells would all be eukaryotic cells.
if we classified aktinimycets in fungi philum it can be true that we have prokaryotic fngi
Fungal species are mostly multicellular, except for yeasts which are single-celled. Fungi belong to a group of eukaryotic organisms and are made of filaments called hyphae.
No. aspergillus is a fungi, which is a eukaryote.
heterotrophic (they cannot make their own food) Eukaryotic (their cells have a nucleus) autotrophs they make their own food from the sun's energy
heterotrophic (they cannot make their own food) Eukaryotic (their cells have a nucleus) autotrophs they make their own food from the sun's energy
Eukarya is the domain of classification for eukaryotes.
Yes kelps do have eukaryotic cells. All living things have eukaryotic cells.
are taste bud cells prokaryotic or eukaryotic
No. Only the eukaryotic cells have a nucleus.
The most commonly identified difference is that eukaryotic cells are nucleated, prokaryotic cells are not.Most eukaryotic cells have only one nucleus, but some have more. Some species of a fungus called slime molds are known to have several thousand nuclei in one cell.However the more general difference is that eukaryotic cells contain organelles (e.g. mitochondria, chloroplasts, nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus) and prokaryotic cells don't. These are believed to have originated as symbiotic microorganisms that entered the cells of the ancestors of early eukaryotes and took up permanent residence.