Yes.
A living organism that consists of only one cell is called a unicellular organism. Some examples include bacteria, algae, and protozoa.
Depends on what bacteria. If it is unicellular then it is an organism you dumb beach.
A unicellular organism is an organism that consists of a single cell. This cell carries out all the functions and processes necessary for the organism to survive, including obtaining nutrients, carrying out metabolism, and reproducing. Examples of unicellular organisms include bacteria, protists, and some types of algae.
Every organism has the attributes that it has because it has evolved to fill a particular niche. Bacteria are very good at what they do; the unicellular form works for them.
Bacteria are unicellular. The cells of the organism they infect are, quite often, part of a multicellular organism.
A single celled organism is called unicellular.
Yesenia pestis is the bacteria, which causes plague. This is unicellular organism.
A single-celled organism is called a microorganism or a unicellular organism. Examples include bacteria, protists, and some types of fungi.
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.
I would place this unicellular organism in the domain Bacteria. The presence of 70s ribosomes and a peptidoglycan cell wall are characteristic features of bacteria.
All prokaryotic organisms are unicellular. Eukaryotic organisms are multicellular
The name that is give to unicellular organisms is bacteria and arachne. Unicellular organisms are part of the kingdoms Monera or Protista.