Malaria is a disease - it isn't an organism. However, the protozoan that causes malaria is unicellular.
Most unicellular organisms are bacteria such as prokaryotes. amoeba, algae, euglena, cyclops, malaria parasite, plankton, protozoa, sporozoa, flagellates, and hydra are some unicellular organisms.
Spore-forming Protists: Sporozoans are nonmotile unicellular parasites that form spores.
They are a group of single-celled organisms, some of which cause disease. Malaria and dysentery are caused by protozoa.
unicellular animals this includes amoeba and Plasmodium species called protozoans and single celled plants like algae
Plasmodium, from the genus plasmodium, as in those organisms which cause Malaria are unicellular organisms. Plasmodium, as in part of the life cycle of a slim mold, can be either acellular, in which multiple nuclei are encased by a single membrane, making them "unicellular" or they can be cellular, in which they have multiple cells and in a way are "multicellular." So they techincally can be both depending on the type of slim mold.
No, single cell organism
Euglenas are unicellular protists.
Amoeba is unicellular.
Yes, diatoms are unicellular
The treatment for malaria depends with the type of malaria. There are two types of malaria: mild malaria and severe malaria. The severe malaria requires intravenous (IV) drug treatment and fluids in the hospital while mild malaria requires oral medication.
Most are multicellular, but some are unicellular