These are the organisms with many cells .
They aren't unicellular as yeast or Protoctista(Protozoans and Protophytas) or Bacteria.
They include all the plants , (except unicellular algae) ,all animals (except protozoans) and fungi.
all mammals are multi celled organisms.
There are more single-celled organisms on Earth than multi-celled organisms. Single-celled organisms, such as bacteria and protists, are abundant and diverse, occupying various environments. Multi-celled organisms, including plants, animals, and fungi, represent a smaller proportion of Earth's biodiversity.
One way that single-celled organisms are different from multi-celled organisms is in their complexity. Single-celled organisms consist of just one cell, while multi-celled organisms are made up of multiple cells organized into specialized tissues, organs, and systems. This allows multi-celled organisms to perform more complex functions and have greater structural and functional diversity.
Bacteria are single-celled organisms.
Cells in single-celled organisms function independently and carry out all life processes on their own, while cells in multi-celled organisms are specialized to perform specific functions. Multi-celled organisms have different types of cells that work together to support the organism as a whole.
Turtles are definitely multi-celled. Single cell organisms are microorganisms such as bacteria and the protozoans.
no
Very much multi-cellular, as are all animals and plants!
False
Archaeabacteria are all unicellular organisms. (one, not multiple)
Plants are multicellular organisms because they have specialized structures and cells that perform specific functions. This allows them to efficiently carry out processes like photosynthesis, growth, and reproduction. Single-celled organisms lack this specialization and are limited in the complexity of tasks they can perform.
Nope. Worms are multi-cellular organisms, just like you and me. They're just very simple