Bacterium is both uni and multicellular, most of them are uni though
No, bacterium is not a multicellular organism. C-money d-town Texas
There are many multicellular organisms. Even protists, such as seaweed, can be multicellular. The only organism that cannot be multicellular is a bacterium.
Most bacterium can be classified as prokaryotes.
Unicellular would imply organisms that thrive as an individual as one cell, like bacterium (E. coli., amoeba). Multicellular would imply organisms that only live successfully as a whole group of cells (humans, fish).
Most of the bacteria are unicellular but a few are multicellular.
Uni = one. Unicellular means one-celled, like a bacterium. Millipedes are multicellular animals, way bigger than unicellular organisms.So, no.
Unicellular would imply organisms that thrive as an individual as one cell, like bacterium (E. coli., amoeba). Multicellular would imply organisms that only live successfully as a whole group of cells (humans, fish).
Bacteria are unicellular organisms, which is to say, a bacterium is a cell. Bacteria differ from the cells of multicellular organisms in that they are generally much smaller and less specialized.
Bacteria are unicellular organisms, which is to say, a bacterium is a cell. Bacteria differ from the cells of multicellular organisms in that they are generally much smaller and less specialized.
a. bacterium b.multicellular organism c.chain of DNA "you invented the basics of sexual reproductiongetting around from place to place and howto use energy from the sun who am i..?
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.
Nope, it is not. All bacteria are unicellular.