Yes.
animalia are multicellular .
fungi, animalia and plantae. protozoa and bacterias have only single celled organisms
Sea horses belong to Kingdom Animalia. Animals have eukaryotic cells.
fungi, animalia and plantae. protozoa and bacterias have only single celled organisms
A one-celled parasite would belong to the Kingdom Protista. This kingdom includes single-celled organisms that do not fit into other kingdoms like Fungi, Plantae, or Animalia.
single celled,it's a bacteria duh!
The group of animalia (animals) did not fully form until the Cambrian period. There is evidence of simple life (single-celled) and small multi-celled life forms from before the Cambrian explosion.
because it is multi-celled
Streptococcus is single-celled.
The five main kingdoms in nature are: Animalia (organisms with complex cells and tissues), Plantae (organisms that photosynthesize), Fungi (organisms that absorb nutrients), Protista (mostly single-celled organisms), and Monera (prokaryotic organisms).
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
Is a arachnids a single or multi celled