No , all plants are multicellular
No , all plants are multicellular
Some Fungi can be multicellular and others can be unicellular. Their cell walls are chitin and fungi are also heterotrophs. Plants are only multicellular. Their cell walls are of cellulose and plants are autotrophs.
Most plants and animals are multicellular,only some are unicellular .
There are unicellular plants but there are also multicellular plants.
All plants are Autotrophs and are Multicellular.
False. Life forms can be categorized as eukaryotes and prokaryotes firstly. Eukaryotes, example your plants ,animals, protists and so on are comprised of multicellular organisms which have membrane bound organelles and then the prokaryotes, example bacteria and archaea lack these membrane bound organelles.
Green Algae is unicellular because it only grows on non-vascular plants which are plants with no tubes to carry nu trains and oxygen.
The kingdom of protists has both heterotrophs, autotrophs, and uni/multicellular organisms.
Unicellular means that the organism has only one cell and grows by the cell enlarging. Mainly only bacteria are like that. Multicellular are organisms that have many cells and grows by the cells growing in numbers. Most plants and animals are multicellular, including manatees.Simple answer: Multicellular
no they are multicellular
The only Kingdom to have only autotrophes would have to be the Kingdom Planae. This kingdom consists of all land plants. I hope this helped :)
Sea weed, spirogyra, roses, hornroot, and Ginkgos are all examples of multicellular plants.