no
Multicellular
The Whittaker version of Kingdom Plantae is all multicellular. However, Plantae has been recently changed to Viridiplantae and now includes the green algae, which contain many unicellular forms.
Not all kingdoms include unicellular organisms. The kingdoms that do not have unicellular organisms include the plantae and animalia kingdom.
Mostly multicellular: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi. Mostly unicellular: Protista.
Kingdom Fungi is Multi cellular and Kingdom Plantae is Unicellular ~Amberr<3 (your_using_the_7thGrade_interactive_reader ) you just got caught
bcs the r prokaryotic, unicellular and single cell.
The Whittaker version of Kingdom Plantae is all multicellular. However, Plantae has been recently changed to Viridiplantae and now includes the green algae, which contain many unicellular forms.
Unicellular, no nucleus visible, bacteria :Monera , unicellular organisms, eukaryotic, amoeba :Protista , Motile, heterotrophic, multicellular, cat :Animalia , Sessile, autotrophic, multicellular, rose :Plantae
Kingdom Protista. Division chlorophyta, green algae, Unicellular motile chlorophyta.
The plantae kingdom refers to organisms that are multicellular, and make their own food (by photosynthesis) sources --> own notes
Yes, just think of all the plants you know. Unicellular organisms are generally very ssmall, but the average tree or flower is not.
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.