Something that consists of multiple cells
Yes. By definition, an animal is eukaryotic and multicellular.
As they display a staggering variety of seemingly multicellular characteristics. If you define multicellularity as "a grouping of differentiated cells" which is the base definition then Volvox actually meets that definition.
There are no unicellular animals. Part of the definition of animals is that they are multicellular.
Unicellular means one cell, multicellular means many cells.
No, they are by definition one celled.
Yes it is classified in Kingdom Animalia Phylum Arthropoda, and the scientific definition of a animal (Animalia) is a multicellular organism that can move and reproduce with another of it's species.
They are most assuredly multicellular. The are fruit flies, a type of insect. Insects are animals, and by definition, animals are multicellular.
Unicellular, no nucleus visible, bacteria :Monera , unicellular organisms, eukaryotic, amoeba :Protista , Motile, heterotrophic, multicellular, cat :Animalia , Sessile, autotrophic, multicellular, rose :Plantae
An organism that exists as a group of cells is known as a multicellular organism. These organisms are composed of specialized cells that work together to perform various functions necessary for survival. Examples include animals, plants, and fungi.
It is multicellular
No. By definition, organisms that belong to the kingdoms of Animalia and Plantae are multicellular and eukaryotic.
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.