The mimivirus
y euglena is called the connecting link between plants and animal
Tetanus is not a virus. It is a bacteria. See link below for photos.
As blue green algae are not animals, they do not represent an evolutionary link between any forms of animals. However, I'm not sure that I'm understanding your question. B Blue-green algae are Monera, neither plants nor animals nor algae. They share the characteristic with bacteria of not having a nucleus
A link below will show a picture of the influenza virus.
These are characteristics of typical bacteriacell wall (has peptidoglycan)cell membraneno nuclear membranereproduce by cell fissionsusceptible to antibiotics, but not antifungal agents Atypical bacteria would deviations of that. For more information visit the Related Link.
y euglena is called the connecting link between plants and animal
The connecting link between birds(Class Aves) and Mammals(Class Mammalia) is Archeopteryx
Tetanus is not a virus. It is a bacteria. See link below for photos.
Capillaries.
duck billed platypus
A link is used for connecting two nodes while path is a source over which data travels.
NADPH
If you mean on a taxonomic tree this would be the node.
As blue green algae are not animals, they do not represent an evolutionary link between any forms of animals. However, I'm not sure that I'm understanding your question. B Blue-green algae are Monera, neither plants nor animals nor algae. They share the characteristic with bacteria of not having a nucleus
some viruses have been known to trigger certain types of cancers..
No, a virus is not a multicellular organism. It isn't even alive by current definition. These little critters are formed of DNA or RNA, which are nucleotide chains. They're some 100 times smaller than bacteria. A link can be found below.
you can get a virus trough opening the email but you most likely going to get through the link