Animals are not prokarotic they are classified as eukaryotic because they have a nucleus.
Yes
All bacteria are prokaryotes.
Prokaryotic cell.
Plants are eukaryotic. The only prokaryotes are in the domains Archaea and Bacteria.
No. The vast majority of prokaryotic organisms are unicellular, but a very few consist of a collection of cells and they are considered to be multicellular.
Bacteria have prokaryotic cells. This means they lack a distinct nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles found in eukaryotic cells.
The mitochondria contain their own DNA in plants and animals; and chloroplasts contain their own DNA in plants and other photosynthetic organisms. Both of these structures divide (almost like cells) inside the cells.*This is also evidence for the theory of endosymbiosis, in which early cells ate early prokarotic cells (bacteria) and gained new organelles.
true animals are animals that look like animals, think like animals walk like animals and are animals
Invertebrate animals are animals that have NO bones, such as crabs. Vertebrate animals are animals that HAVE bones, such as dogs.
Bacteria, that's why it's called prokarotic (eukaryotic means that a cell does have a nucleus.) But most of it grows into larger organisms, becoming a multi-cellular organism.
# Guard Animals # Fiber Animals # Pack Animals # Pets # Show Animals # Meat Animals
There are a variety of different lifestyle's of different animals like some animals are domestic or house animals and some animals are live stock animals some animals are wild as well.