Brown algae are always multicellular, never unicellular or colonial.
Yes they are multicellular
Brown Algae are multicellular.
Yes
yes
Most of the members of the Protist Kingdom are unicellular, however, there are a few species that, though simple, their structure and composition is multicellular, such as some species of algae, like the seaweed or 'kelp'.
Algae can be unicellular or multicellular, depending on what type of algae it is.
most algae in the world is single celled but there are a few algae that are multicellular
It may be Algae or Alga, the singular of Algae.
Green Algae is unicellular because it only grows on non-vascular plants which are plants with no tubes to carry nu trains and oxygen.
red algae, green algae, and brown algae
Yes i think so
Brown algae support by bio teacher
species of the phylum Phaephyta, all multicellular and almost all marine.
A multicellular organism is an organism with more than one cell, unlike an unicellular organism, that has only one cell. Multicellular organisms include plants, animals and human beings. Unicellular organisms include protozoans and specific algae like brown algae.
The kingdom that multicellular algae are categorized under is Plantae.
Phytoplankton, colonial, filamenous, and multicellular
Yes plant cells are multicellular. They form specialized tissues. Other examples of multicellular organisms are fungi, animals, and brown algae.
Protista
1. Euglena 2. Diatoms 3. Dinoflagellate 4. Green Algae 5. Red Algae 6. Brown Algae
Yes, seaweed is a multicellular algae
Protista