Yes. Refer to the related links for a Wikipedia article on Spirogyra.
spirogyra is unicellular because it is an example of green algae or chlorophyta, which is a unicellular organism:
multicellular
spirogyra is a unicellular organism
it's single-celled organisms
No. It is a multicellular organism.
colonial
spyragyra is a unicellular or multicellular.
None
Spirogyra Is a filamentous,m,ulticellular organism found in the protista kingdom. It consists of a cell wall and cell membrane like most plant cells and it has spiral plastids studded with starch granules. It also has a nucleus (of course!)
spirogyra move toward the light.
Spirogyra is a green algae.It has a cell wall.
no, spirogyra is a cell, not a plant.
None
yes
Small fish eat spirogyra.
eukarya
no...bird's are not single celled
ameba, paramecium, euglena, volvox, and spirogyra. Basically anything in the protist kingdom.
You would speak of Spirogyra in terms of the species of Spirogyra: "there are over 400 species of Spirogyra"
Yourself or any human being for that matter, Spirogyra(Alga), Grasshoppers, Bats, Cats, Dogs, etc.
spirogyra is a water silk
The scientific name of spirogyra is Spirogyra. It belongs to the genus Spirogyra within the group of green algae.
Spirogyra Is a filamentous,m,ulticellular organism found in the protista kingdom. It consists of a cell wall and cell membrane like most plant cells and it has spiral plastids studded with starch granules. It also has a nucleus (of course!)
yes spirogyra does have a nucles