bacteria
Unicellular organisms with no nucleus are called prokaryotes; they do not have a kingdom classification, but have two domains: Archaea and Bacteria.
All animals are eukaryotes. In fact, anything within the domain Eukaryota is a eukaryote. This includes animals, plants, fungi, and others. Biology classifies everything into two domains: one for eukaryotes and one for prokaryotes. Prokaryotes are almost exclusively unicellular, although it is believed there are some multicellular prokaryotes. Eukaryotes can be either unicellular or multicellular.Answer is Yes, obviously.
One is single celled one is not
Archaea and Eukaryote are two different domains from the three domains of life classification. And Prokaryotes belong to two domains: the bacteria and the archaea.
Yes prokaryotes have been divided in two domains named Archea and Eubacteria .
there are important differences in the structure and chemical makeup of their cells.Some prokaryotes are unicellular, and others are multicellular.Although bacteria and archaea are similar in some ways, there are important differences in the structure and chemical makeup of their cells.
Bacteria and Archaea
They differ because one is cool and the other one is awesome
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
Prokaryotes belong to two taxonomic domains: the bacteria and the archaea.
The unicellular prokaryotes are one-celled organisms. They are located on two domains: the Archaea and the Eubacteria. The third domain, Eukarya, contain multi-cellular organisms.
bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea