cell is the smallest level of organization in a unicellular organism
From smallest to largest, a multicellular organism can be organized into cells, tissues, organ systems, and organisms.
If you are referring to organization of complex multicellular organisms, then level of organization can be as follows: cell>tissue>organ>organ system>organism
Multicellular organisms have 5 levels of organization ranging from simplest to most complex...cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, organisms.
The first level of organization are living cells. The second level of organization are tissues. The third level of organization is an organ. The fourth level of organization is the organ system. The last level is organisms.
Level one- Cells are the smallest part of living thingsLevel two- Tissues are made by a group of cellsLevel three- Organs are made by groups of tissuesLevel Four- Organ Systems are made by organsLevel five- Organisms
an Organ System
No sorry -:-)
It is referred as a Taxon.Taxon- groups or level of organization in which organisms are classified.
It is referred as a Taxon.Taxon- groups or level of organization in which organisms are classified.
In what is possibly the most extremely unsatisfying answer, we don't actually know. As microscopes get more and more powerful, we are discovering incredible amounts of structure at the sub-atomic level. Despite this, the common label for the smallest physical organization in ecology is simply "Organisms". At one point we thought that things couldn't get much smaller. Now we are finding vast factories with unprecedented order as we look closer at even single-celled organisms.
The simplest level of organization as far as taxonomy goes would be the most inclusive one; a domain. If you are asking in terms of things such as organisms, it would be the smallest, the cell.
tissues yes TISSUES is the right answer