Archeabacteria- they are often found in harsh conditions like volcano hot springs, brine pools, and other extremities.
They lack a nucleus. They are prokaryotes. They are unicellular.
Archaea Domain
Not all prokaryotes are unicellular. A few prokaryotes such as myxobacteria have multicellular stages in their life cycles.
they are both unicellular ( are single celled).
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.
The unicellular prokaryotes in the domain Bacteria are classified in the kingdom Bacteria.
They lack a nucleus. They are prokaryotes. They are unicellular.
Archaea Domain
Not all prokaryotes are unicellular. A few prokaryotes such as myxobacteria have multicellular stages in their life cycles.
Unicellular organisms with no nucleus are called prokaryotes; they do not have a kingdom classification, but have two domains: Archaea and Bacteria.
Yes, prokaryotes are unicellular.
Mushrooms, algae, and protozoa are all examples of organisms belonging to the kingdom Fungi, Protista, and Plantae, respectively. They are all eukaryotic organisms with different biological characteristics and functions in their respective ecosystems.
Paramecium are only unicellular and they are eukaryotes and not prokaryotes.
Unicellular organisms can be eukaryotes or prokaryotes, though bacteria are prokaryotes. There are many unicellular protists and fungi that are eukaryotic.
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
eukaryotic
Prokaryotes