Single-Celled Organisms (Kid's Guide to the Classification of Living Things) was written by Elaine Pasco.
Single-celled Organisms was written by Helmut Schenk.
You will have to look in your science book and it Will have great pics or answers
All the processes of life are carried out in a single cell.* IRISH education program.* Fifth year.* This answer from (NEW SENIOR BIOLOGY) book.
its called evolution. single celled organisms evolved o multi celled organisms. This enabled life to have the perameters to evolve futher, we are the eventual product of primates. Charles Darwin coined the idea of evolution i recomend you read his book on it called "the origin of species"
Single was written by Judy Ford.
Haha lol. That's funny cuz i have the same book in middle school anyways...."All organisms grow during some part of their lives. In a single-celled organism, the cell gets bigger and divides. This makes new organisms. An organism made of many cells gets bigger by making more cells. As these organisms grow, they get new traits. These traits often change how the organism looks. For example, as a tadpole grows into a frog, it develops legs and loses its tail."it is not funny you wished it was it is just for kids or tenagers that need help with there science homework so dont judgethat's what the book said....
Haha lol. That's funny cuz i have the same book in middle school anyways...."All organisms grow during some part of their lives. In a single-celled organism, the cell gets bigger and divides. This makes new organisms. An organism made of many cells gets bigger by making more cells. As these organisms grow, they get new traits. These traits often change how the organism looks. For example, as a tadpole grows into a frog, it develops legs and loses its tail."it is not funny you wished it was it is just for kids or tenagers that need help with there science homework so dont judgethat's what the book said....
Haha lol. That's funny cuz i have the same book in middle school anyways...."All organisms grow during some part of their lives. In a single-celled organism, the cell gets bigger and divides. This makes new organisms. An organism made of many cells gets bigger by making more cells. As these organisms grow, they get new traits. These traits often change how the organism looks. For example, as a tadpole grows into a frog, it develops legs and loses its tail."it is not funny you wished it was it is just for kids or tenagers that need help with there science homework so dont judgethat's what the book said....
Haha lol. That's funny cuz i have the same book in middle school anyways...."All organisms grow during some part of their lives. In a single-celled organism, the cell gets bigger and divides. This makes new organisms. An organism made of many cells gets bigger by making more cells. As these organisms grow, they get new traits. These traits often change how the organism looks. For example, as a tadpole grows into a frog, it develops legs and loses its tail."it is not funny you wished it was it is just for kids or tenagers that need help with there science homework so dont judgethat's what the book said....
Haha lol. That's funny cuz i have the same book in middle school anyways...."All organisms grow during some part of their lives. In a single-celled organism, the cell gets bigger and divides. This makes new organisms. An organism made of many cells gets bigger by making more cells. As these organisms grow, they get new traits. These traits often change how the organism looks. For example, as a tadpole grows into a frog, it develops legs and loses its tail."it is not funny you wished it was it is just for kids or tenagers that need help with there science homework so dont judgethat's what the book said....
Extremophiles are microbes that adapt to very extreme environments. These benefit from being single-celled because there is less to adapt.
Simple one-celled organisms, bacteria are the most plentiful microorganisms as well as the most pathogenic.That is straight from my college text book
The five kingdoms are The Moneran Kingdom (single celled organisms that do not have a nucleus - forms of bacteria), The Protist Kingdom (single celled organisms with a nucleus - some algae, amoeba), The Fungi Kingdom (motionless organism that need nutrients to survive - mushrooms, molds), The Plant Kingdom (converts energy from the sun into food - garden flowers, crops) and The Animal Kingdom (most complex organism - vertebrates and invertebrates - mammals, reptiles, amphibians, bird, fish).