Obama
No they move aroung and eat food (more like us) instead of photosynthesizing (getting energy from the sun, like plants.)
Plantlike protists, which are commonly called algae, are extremely diverse. Like plants, algae are autotrophs. Most are able to use the sun's energy to make their own food.
Plantlike protists are called algae. These organisms can be unicellular or multicellular, and they can photosynthesize like plants. Algae play a crucial role in aquatic ecosystems as primary producers.
Plants are like protist in that they have a relatively simple organization.
plantlike
wiener like
fungi like
PROTIST
Producers
Kingdom Plantae is probably plantlike. Kingdom Animalia is probably animal-like. That probably didn't answer your question, though. I'm guessing your context was something about fungi or "protist" kingdoms. Mushrooms are actually animal-like because they use chitin, a protein found in insects, rather than cellulose, found in all plants, as a structural protein. They also are heterotrophic (have to eat/suck the life out of stuff). So they are a bit more related to animals like ourselves. In the protist "kingdom", now disbanded, slime molds resemble fungi and animals somewhat, amoebas/ciliates resemble animals, and of course algae(including seaweed!) resemble plants.
Yes, multicellularity is a characteristic of plants. Plants are composed of different types of cells organized into tissues and organs, allowing them to grow, develop, and perform specific functions like photosynthesis.
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