Most, but not all, protista are unicellular.
can be bold
Amoeba
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.
Unicelluar organism such as bacteria, archaea (both prokaryotes and eukaryotes), protozoa, unicellular algae, and unicellular fungi or yeasts.
The amoebas are in the protista kingdom.
Amoeba belong in the Kingdom Protista.
Protista
Amoeba belong in the Kingdom Protista.
Paramecia are in the kingdom of protists.
Amoeba proteus, the common amoeba, is currently classified in Kingdom Amoebozoa. Older sources may list amoebae under the now-defunct Kingdom Protista or (in really old books) Kingdom Animalia. The change is because of the current trend to define taxonomic groups on evolutionary kinship.
amoeba Blepharisma
No. amoeba are of Kingdom Protista. The phylum amoeboid, of course.
paramecium and amoebas belong to protista kingdom because they both are protists.
Protista
Domain: EukaryaKingdom: ProtistaPhylum: plasmodromaClass: sarcodinaOrder: amoebidaFamily: amoebidaeGenus: AmoebaSpecies: proteusScientific name: Amoeba proteus
An amoeba is a unicellular, genderless organism that belongs to the Protista kingdom & can reproduce through asexual reproduction. Amoeba are the unicellular, microscopic organism which moves by the help of pseudopodia (false foot)