There are currently millions of species of single-celled organisms, and million of others that were once here and are now extinct. Which of these would BEST describe the first, most primitive organism to arise on Earth from which all other life evolved?
Prokaryotic organisms belong to the kingdom Monera. This kingdom includes bacteria and archaea, which are single-celled organisms that lack a distinct nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles in their cells.
A: The kingdom that is single-celled is the protist kingdom. It is one of the five kingdoms of living things; plant, animal, protist, moneran, and fungi. An example of a protist is algae. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and FungiProtista and Fungi
the kingdom Protista. Organisms in this kingdom can be autotrophic, heterotrophic, or mixotrophic, meaning they can produce their own food, consume other organisms, or do both.
Archaea are typically single-celled organisms. They are prokaryotes, with cells that lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. However, some species of archaea can form multicellular structures under certain conditions.
The Kingdom Monera contains prokaryotic organisms: the bacteria and bluegreen algae.
Yes prokaryotes are single-celled because they are unicelular
A one-celled parasite would belong to the Kingdom Protista. This kingdom includes single-celled organisms that do not fit into other kingdoms like Fungi, Plantae, or Animalia.
Kingdom Animalia are chemoheterotroph in terms of their mode of nutrition. They consume organic compounds, carbonically for energy sources.
Kingdom Monera Prokaryotic single-celled with no nucleus
Prokaryotic organisms belong to the kingdom Monera. This kingdom includes bacteria and archaea, which are single-celled organisms that lack a distinct nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles in their cells.
The simplest kingdom out of the five kingdoms is the Monera kingdom, which consists of single-celled organisms like bacteria. They lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles found in more complex organisms.
A: The kingdom that is single-celled is the protist kingdom. It is one of the five kingdoms of living things; plant, animal, protist, moneran, and fungi. An example of a protist is algae. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and FungiProtista and Fungi
n a single-celled organism , the cell gets larger and divides, making other organisms.
No. Cats and dolphins are made up of many, many, many cells. Single-celled organisms are bacteria and other microscopic organisms.
That depends if you mean "were my parents single celled organisms?" If that is the case, then no, we are complex organisms. Most single celled organisms are protista, and fungi. These are microorganisms that are not seen by the human eye and require a telescope. If you meant "did humans evolve from single celled organisms," however, then yes, scientist believe that we did. The theory is that we were single celled, became animals, and then formed into what we are today. Churches, on the other hand, have a different theory.
There are many single celled organisms (unicellular).Life on Earth is separated into two main divisions: the prokaryotes and the eukaryotes. Both of these contain single celled organism.The prokaryotes are the eubateria and the archaebacteria. Both of these kingdoms only contain single celled organisms. Prokaryotic organisms have no nucleus and have no membrane bound organelles.Within the eukaryotes the kingdoms of amoebozoa, fungi and plantae contain single celled organisms. In all cases these organisms have a nucleus and membrane bound organelles.The amoebozoa kingdom contains such things as the amoeba and slime molds. Fungi comprise the molds, mushrooms, toadstools and other similar organisms. Plantae are the plants.
Because they are single celled organisms. There are single celled plants like clamydomonas and chlorella. Amoeba and paramecium are not classified as plants because their mode of getting food is not like plants. Rather it resembles more with animals.