It is autotrophic...
No, the amoeba is a unicellular eukaryotic organism. It belongs to the domain Eukarya and possesses a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles within its cell.
Yes, amoeba is a unicellular organism. It consists of a single cell that carries out all the functions necessary for its survival and reproduction.
The amoeba is a unicellular organism that can be found in freshwater environments.
you mean unicellular organism then we have following organisms which are formed of only one cellAmoebaParameciumEuglenaPlasmodium etcthey all are unicellular eukaryotic organisms and prokaryotic organisms include bacteria and cyanobacteria
Amoeba: A type of protist that moves by extending its pseudopods. Paramecium: A ciliated protist that feeds on bacteria and other small organisms. Euglena: A protist that can photosynthesize like a plant and move with a flagellum.
An amoeba is a unicellular, genderless organism that belongs to the Protista kingdom & can reproduce through asexual reproduction. Amoeba are the unicellular, microscopic organism which moves by the help of pseudopodia (false foot)
No Amoeba is not prokaryotic , it is Protist .
No, the amoeba is a unicellular eukaryotic organism. It belongs to the domain Eukarya and possesses a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles within its cell.
Unicellular, no nucleus visible, bacteria :Monera , unicellular organisms, eukaryotic, amoeba :Protista , Motile, heterotrophic, multicellular, cat :Animalia , Sessile, autotrophic, multicellular, rose :Plantae
Unicellular.
Unicellular.
An amoeba is a Eukaryote: it has a nucleus.
Amoeba is unicellular.
No they are asexual.
An amoeba is a unicellular organism.
Oh, dude, an amoeba is totally unicellular. It's like a lone wolf in the microscopic world, just doing its thing all by itself. No need for a squad when you're a one-cell wonder, right?
Asexual reproduction in amoeba is known as binary fission.