The horse belongs to Kingdom Animalia. This is because they have multicellular cells, depend on other organisms for food and can move independently.
A protozoa, or amoeba, would be a single celled animal. A horse might have millions of cells in it's body. A horse is far too big to be a single celled animal. the answer is No.
Horses are Multicellular.
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donkey is a multicellular organism...
multicellular
Horses are multicellular
A horse is multicellular.
Multicellular
Cows are Multicellular organisms. Hope you Like it!.
Unicellular.
multicellular
Multicellular
multicellular
Cows are Multicellular organisms. Hope you Like it!.
Halophiles are multicellular.
no
Deer are multicellular organisms. They belong to the animal kingdom (Animalia), specifically the class Mammalia. Deer are vertebrates and have complex, multicellular structures composed of specialized cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems. They are composed of billions of cells organized into various tissues and organs such as muscles, bones, nerves, and organs like the heart, lungs, and digestive system. Deer reproduce sexually and undergo development from a fertilized egg (zygote) into a multicellular embryo, demonstrating their multicellular nature as complex organisms within the animal kingdom.
it is unicellular.
Yes. Trees are Multicellular organisms Hope you Like it!
Most are multicellular, but some are unicellular
Most are multicellular, but some are unicellular
is zygomycota - unicellular or multicellular
Unicellular
Multicellular. All animals are multicellular. There is no such thing as a unicellular animal.
It is multicellular. Unicellular organisms are too small to see.