Most, but not all, protista are unicellular.
Yes
Protista is a kingdom within the eukaryotic domain. However, the kingdom is recognized to be paraphyletic: it is not defined as an ancestor and all its descendants, but includes a wide variety of organisms of which the exact relationship to the eukaryotic domain is not determined. Genetic assays are now being applied to redefine the various clades in Protista and establish their relationships.
protista
False
Almost exclusively autotrophic. Very few plants combine autotrophy with some heterotrophy; Venus Fly Traps and the like.
Protozoans are members of the kingdom Protista, and one characteristic they have is they are heterotrophy
Euglena's are both heterotrophic and autotrophic because they can make their own food with photosynthese and also absorb food from their environment.
Biological productivity is how much energy or mass is produced by the members of an ecosystem. There are two types of biological productivity: primary production, in which organisms create organic material from inorganic materials through autotrophy; and secondary production, in which organic material is created from other organic material through heterotrophy.
The factor that the kingdoms Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia have in common is that their cells are eukaryotic. This is in contrast to the Monerans, or Bacteria and Archaea, whose cells are prokaryotic.
An adverb for heterotrophy. For example, many organisms live heterotrophycally, which means they with use heterotrophy to live.
Animals ingest their food while fungi grow into it.
It is both autotroph and heterotroph
it is whe you dont know how old somthing is
two.an Autotrophy and a Heterotroph
Yes, protista do have flagella.
Locomotory organ of protista