single-cell
The archaea are singled celled prokaryotes.
It is multi-celled
no, they are multicellular eukaryotes. they come under bryophytes.
you times the singled celled one by two to get the multicellular organisim
Archaea are single-celled (unicellular).
archaebacteria are the type of bacteria which dates back to the first forms of life on earth. And its my guess that bacteria are unicellular whether unicellular or multicellular
a large and diverse group of simple, typically Autotrophicorganisms, ranging from Unicellularto Multicellular
Archaea are typically single-celled organisms. They are prokaryotes, with cells that lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. However, some species of archaea can form multicellular structures under certain conditions.
No, monerans are unicellular organisms. They are prokaryotes that do not have a true nucleus or membrane-bound organelles.
Domains Bacteria and Archaea only have single-celled organisms, such as bacteria and archaea, which lack membrane-bound organelles and nuclei. These organisms exist as individual cells and do not form multicellular structures.
Amoeba is multi celled
it is single celled