They have organized nucleus. So they become eukaryotic.
Fungi are eukaryotes.
both are different
The archaebacteria belong to the domain Archaea.
(Mitochondria is the plural for mitochondrion so the "a" can be removed from the question.)Mitochondria are powerhouse organelles found in most eukaryotic cells. Like plants and animals, fungi are eukaryotes - and nearly all fungi cells contain mitochondria. (Yes, even most plant cells have mitochondria - and respire on overcast days and at nights when chloroplasts can't perform photosynthesis. Fungi though, like animals, do not contain chloroplasts.)Note: An exception is the phylum Neocallimastgomycota, a division of fungi who use hydrogenosomes instead of mitochondria.
Fungi are in forms of foods we eat. Mushrooms are fungi, and humans eat mushrooms, so humans eat fungi.
Yeast and truffles are part of the sac fungi. Also included in the sac fungi are penicillium and morels.
both are different
nope. they are Eukaryotic
Prokaryotic cells do not have a membrane around their nucleus(not separating it from other organelles) and Eukaryotic do.
they are only found in eukariotic cells. Prokariotic cells are very simple and don't have membrane bound organeles
A flagellum is a tail-like projection that protrudes from the cell body of certain prokariotic and eukariotic cells, and functions in movement.
they are alike b/c prokaryotic have false nucleus while eukariyotic have true nucleus and prokariyotic lake membrane bounded organelles and b/c of many differences in them, they are alike . . .
Horses have cells that contain neuclei...so eukariotic.
they are called prokariotic cells
They are not eukariyotes.They are prokariotic organisms
no
No they are not eukaryotic.They are prokariotic organisms
They are not eukariyotes.They are prokariotic organisms