There are no eukariyotic bacteria.All bacteria are prokariyotic
No, bacteria are not eukaryotic cells. Bacteria are classified as prokaryotic cells, meaning they lack a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles found in eukaryotic cells. This fundamental difference in cell structure is one of the key distinctions between bacteria and eukaryotic organisms.
Bacteria are the only prokaryotes, so algae are eukaryotic.
Bacteria have prokaryotic cells. They do not have eukaryotic cells.
Plants are eukaryotic. The only prokaryotes are in the domains Archaea and Bacteria.
No. They are bacteria and all bacteria are prokaryotes not eukaryotes.
Bacteria is a type of prokaryotic cell
A frog is obviously eukaryotic, as all organisms are except for bacteria, which are prokaryotic.
No, eukaryotic cells are not represented by bacteria cells. Bacteria are prokaryotic cells, while eukaryotic cells are found in organisms such as animals, plants, fungi, and protists. Some algal cells are eukaryotic and share similarities with other eukaryotic cells in terms of having a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
The cells found in the human body are eukaryotic cells. Organisms that have eukaryotic cells are usually multicellular like humans. Organisms that have prokaryotic cells are usually unicelluar, like bacteria.
There are no eukariyotic bacteria.All bacteria are prokariyotic
Bacteria are prokaryotes.
it is a eukaryotic cell. yes it is