Yes, bacteria is unicellular, no, they are not plants. Bacterias are categorized into their own kingdom and is not associated with plants (although there are some bacterias that photosynthesize).
No, bacteria are not plants. Bacteria are unicellular organisms that belong to their own distinct kingdom, separate from the plant kingdom. They lack specialized organelles and do not undergo photosynthesis like plants do.
Unicellular.
Bacteria are typically unicellular organisms, meaning they exist as single-celled organisms. Some bacteria species can form groups or colonies, but each individual bacterium is considered unicellular.
The kingdom of bacteria is unicellular, meaning that bacteria are made up of a single cell.
Unicellular infectious agents are prokaryotes, eukaryotes, bacteria, and protoza.
Bacteria
One of the unicellular organisms is bacteria.
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.
unicellular, however sometimes they are associated in groups or long strings.
The Amoeba eats Algea, Bacteria, Plant Cells, and aslo other unicellular organisms
Unicellular
Bacteria