Fungi and Protista.
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.
The archaebacteria are unicellular.
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
Most of the bacteria are unicellular but a few are multicellular.
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.
The kingdom of protists has both heterotrophs, autotrophs, and uni/multicellular organisms.
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.
The kingdom Monera consists of unicellular organisms.
for Plato its both multicellular and unicellular organisms
The kingdom that includes autotrophs, heterotrophs, unicellular, and multicellular organisms is the Kingdom Protista. This kingdom is a diverse group of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit neatly into the other major kingdoms.
The organism belongs to the Kingdom Protista. This kingdom includes eukaryotic organisms that are unicellular or multicellular but lack specialized tissues, such as protozoa and algae.
The archaebacteria are unicellular.
No, muticellular.
Sporozoan are unicellular organisms. It's classified into the Kingdom Protista, which are single-celled organisms.
Both unicellular and multicellular fungi exist.
It includes mostly unicellular organisms that do not fit into the other kingdoms.
The kingdom that includes complex multicellular organisms that obtain food by breaking down other substances in their surroundings is Fungi. Fungi are heterotrophic organisms that absorb nutrients from their environment through extracellular digestion.