It contains both. Kingdom Protista is a large and very diverse group of organisms and can live as unicellular, multicellular, and in some cases, colonial cells.
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.
Some types are multicellular and some are unicellular.
No, they are multicellular. Don't confuse plants with yeasts and algae!!! Yeasts are part of fungi. For the most part, fungi are multicellular, but yeast is the exception to that rule for that kingdom. And fungi are not plants. The Kingdom Fungi and Kingdom Plantae are separate. Algae can also be multicellular or unicellular depending on the genus. And algae, which includes seaweeds, are not plants either! Algae are under the Kingdom Protista.
Fungi are almost entirely multicellular (with yeasts e.g., Saccharomyces cerviseae, unicellular fungi) Many imperfect Fungi are also unicellular .Characters : Heterotrophic (deriving their energy from another organism, whether alive or dead), and usually having some cells with two nuclei (multinucleate, as opposed to the more common one, or uninucleate) per cell. Ecologically this kingdom is important (along with certain bacteria) as decomposers and recyclers of nutrients. Economically, the Fungi provide us with food (mushrooms; Bleu cheese/Roquefort cheese; baking and brewing), antibiotics (the first of the wonder drugs, penicillin, was isolated from the fungus Penicillium), and crop parasites (doing several million dollars per year of damage).
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.
Fungi and Protista.
No, fungi is not unicellular. Fungi is multicellular
No, kingdoms are broad classifications of organisms based on shared characteristics. Eukaryotes can be unicellular or multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists, while multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
No, not all fungi are unicellular. Fungi can be unicellular (yeast) or multicellular (molds and mushrooms). Multicellular fungi are made up of networks of filaments called hyphae that collectively form the fungal structure.
Some types are multicellular and some are unicellular.
The kingdom of protists has both heterotrophs, autotrophs, and uni/multicellular organisms.
There are more multicellular fungi organisms than unicellular fungi organisms. Multicellular fungi, such as molds and mushrooms, are more common and diverse than unicellular fungi, such as yeasts. This is because multicellular fungi have a wider range of ecological roles and adaptations.
yes they are also some fungi is yummy too!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No, they are multicellular. Don't confuse plants with yeasts and algae!!! Yeasts are part of fungi. For the most part, fungi are multicellular, but yeast is the exception to that rule for that kingdom. And fungi are not plants. The Kingdom Fungi and Kingdom Plantae are separate. Algae can also be multicellular or unicellular depending on the genus. And algae, which includes seaweeds, are not plants either! Algae are under the Kingdom Protista.
Fungi are almost entirely multicellular (with yeasts e.g., Saccharomyces cerviseae, unicellular fungi) Many imperfect Fungi are also unicellular .Characters : Heterotrophic (deriving their energy from another organism, whether alive or dead), and usually having some cells with two nuclei (multinucleate, as opposed to the more common one, or uninucleate) per cell. Ecologically this kingdom is important (along with certain bacteria) as decomposers and recyclers of nutrients. Economically, the Fungi provide us with food (mushrooms; Bleu cheese/Roquefort cheese; baking and brewing), antibiotics (the first of the wonder drugs, penicillin, was isolated from the fungus Penicillium), and crop parasites (doing several million dollars per year of damage).