1 organism has 1 cell
Eubacteria are single celled organisms.
Yes it is unicellular
Eubacteria are single-celled organisms, so each individual bacterium is a single cell. The number of cells in eubacteria populations can vary widely depending on their growth conditions and stage of growth.
Nope and archeabacteria doesn't either.No, the cells of a Eubacteria do not have a nucleus.
Eubacteria have prokaryotic cells. Eubacteria IS Kingdom Bacteria! The Eu- was there to distinguish it from Archaebacteria when Archaebacteria were in the same kingdom as Eubacteria and not in its own kingdom of Archae, as they are now. (The old kingdom that contained both Eubacteria and Archaebacteria was called Kingdom Monera)
While eubacteria may lack the organized organelles found in eukaryotic cells, many eubacteria have specialized internal membranes. Cyanobacteria, for example, have membranes that contain chlorophyll and other chemicals required to carry out photosynthesis.
No they dont have.They have prokariyotic cells
Eubacteria and archaeabacteria.
Two, now that the designation Monera is defunct. They are. Eubacteria and Archaea.
Eubacteria are prokaryotes. They lack a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles in their cells.
it means that its a phirana
There are two: archae and eubacteria