Nope, it is not. All bacteria are unicellular.
No. A bacillus bacterium is a single cell. They do form what look like strings and clumps but still are each one cell.
All bacteria are unicellular.
Bacteria is unicellular
Majority of bacteria are unicellular while some may be multicellular
Animals are multicellular. They have a lot of cells in their body. Certain types of bacteria would be an example of unicellular things.
Most of the bacteria are unicellular but a few are multicellular.
A good example of unicellular cells would be bacteria, while multicellular cells would be like a sponge. Unicellular cells consist of only one cell surviving on it's own while multicellular cells are working together for a purpose.
All bacteria, including the rod shaped bacillus, are unicellular.
All bacteria, including the rod shaped bacillus, are unicellular.
Bacillus anthracis is a unicellular bacterium that forms chains of rod-shaped cells. It is a Gram-positive, aerobic bacteria that causes anthrax in animals and humans.
Bacteria is unicellular
Majority of bacteria are unicellular while some may be multicellular
It is bacteria.
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
A unicellular producer example :bacteria a multicellular consumer example: fungi
Animals are multicellular. They have a lot of cells in their body. Certain types of bacteria would be an example of unicellular things.
I think it actually depends on the type of bacteria.
Single-celled. Most bacteria are single celled.
no, any kind of bacteria is unicellular