Well, multicellular and unicellular organisms vary greater in differences. For starters, multicellular organisms have multiple cells, hence the name, while unicellular organisms are single-celled. Also, multi-cellular organisms are in animals, humans, and plants, while single-celled organisms are mainly found only in bacteria and often fungus. Lastly, multi-cellular organisms are composed n tissues, organs, and organ systems while single-celled organisms stand alone; hence the name.
uni cellular organisams have only one cell while multicellular organisms have multiple.
a human is obviouly multicellular, because we have more than one cell.
No. Absolutely not. Whatever gave you that idea?
They differ because multicelluar organisms live longer and are bigger
Unicellular organisms are complete living entities consisting of a single cell that carries out all life processes, while a single cell is the basic structural and functional unit of living organisms. Essentially, all unicellular organisms are single cells, but not all single cells are complete unicellular organisms.
It is multicellular
The scientific term for unicellular organisms is "unicellular organisms" or "unicellular organisms."
Unicellular organisms have to complete all tasks to survive, and obviously have no specialised cells, while a multi cellular cell would be specialised and be made for a specific task such as a lung cell.
Most of the unicellular organisms reproduces asexually.
Diseases do not cause unicellular organisms; unicellular organisms cause diseases.
All prokaryotic organisms are unicellular. Eukaryotic organisms are multicellular
Colonies of unicellular organisms can work together.