yes
It is multi-celled
It is multi-celled
Life consists of three domains; Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya. Of these domains, Archaea and Bacteria consist exclusively of single celled organisms. Additionally, one of the four kingdoms of Eukarya, i.e. Protista, consists of single celled organisms.So single celled organisms could be referred to as Archaea, Bacteria and Protista.
single-cell
A single-celled organism belongs to the domain of Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukarya. These domains encompass all forms of life on Earth, with single-celled organisms falling into the categories of bacteria, archaea, or protists within the Eukarya domain.
Archaea are single-celled (unicellular).
Archaeabacteria are all unicellular organisms. (one, not multiple)
Domains Bacteria and Archaea only have single-celled organisms, such as bacteria and archaea, which lack membrane-bound organelles and nuclei. These organisms exist as individual cells and do not form multicellular structures.
Archaea are typically single-celled organisms. They are prokaryotes, with cells that lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. However, some species of archaea can form multicellular structures under certain conditions.
No, bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria, not archaea. Archaea are a separate domain of single-celled microorganisms that are distinct from both bacteria and viruses.
archaebacteria are the type of bacteria which dates back to the first forms of life on earth. And its my guess that bacteria are unicellular whether unicellular or multicellular
Extremophiles is the scientific name for Achaebacteria and you are welcome