No.
No.
Jellyfish are single celled organisms.
The bodies of jellyfish are made up of a variety of tissue types. The outside of the animal is covered in a transparent skin. The "jelly" you see (called mesoglea) is often made up of two layers. The outer layer is often reinforced with fibres, while the inner layer is not. Dividing the two is a tissue called the gastodermal lamella. There is also a muscle tissue on the underside of the inner layer of mesoglea. There are other tissues present as well, such as those of the the digestive and nervous systems.
No, theyre many celled. They are classified as animals.
Yes, it is .
single celled animals. GO! GO! GO!
a single celled animal is called an amoeba
A single cell animal is an animal with only one cell. They are also called Eukaryotic.
Multicellular
The kingdom Protista contain all single celled organisms. Examples are: protozoans (animal-like single celled organisms) and algae (plant-like single celled organisms).
There are over 200 species of Scyphozoa, about 50 species of Staurozoa, about 20 species of Cubozoa, and in Hydrozoa there are about 1000-1500 species that produce medusae (and many more hydrozoa species that do not).
protazoa