multicellular, plants can be both, unicellular and multicellullar
multicellular
no, any kind of bacteria is unicellular
No cells are unicellular, only organisms can be unicellular.
No, the majority of organisms on Earth are unicellular. But we multicellular organisms are the more interesting kind. Multicellular organisms rule!
Okapi looks kind of like a weirdly colored deer, it's obviously multicellular.
No. A unicellular organism is an organism made up of ONE CELL, so they're all microscopic. Microscopic means that you can't see it it without a microscope. And you can see a sea urchin, so it is not microscopic, so it's not unicellular.
These have advanced and complete cells. These cells contains membrane bound nuclei and other cellular organelles and are called eukaryotic cells. These cells are found in unicellular and multicellular plants and animals and contain plasma membrane, DNA and cytoplasm with ribosome and cellular organelles such as mitochondria,
Prokaryotes are (mostly) unicellular organisms without an nucleus.Humans on the other hand are multicellular eukaryotes. Our cells contain nuclei EXCEPT for red blood cells. These do not contain a nucleus in order to be able to transport more oxygen.
It depends on what kind of fungi you have, some species of fungi are unicellular and some species of fungi are multicellular.
Yes, all living things are made up of cells.
Both!All cells in a multicellular organism are identical genetically. This is because they are all formed from a single original cell (in humans, for example, the zygote) by mitosis.However, as the organism develops, some cells will become different in shape and function; this is called differentiation, and it allows different cells to specialize for different roles. Some examples in humans: nerve cells, muscle cells, white blood cells (and there is more than one kind of each of these).
killing humans or eating their own kind answer of mico