Yes, onions are multicellular organisms.
similarities: cell wall present, cytoplasm, both eukaryote. difrences: elodea cell smaller vacuoles chloroplasts present unicellular onion cell: large vacuoles multicellular
many
Euglena are unicellular organisms. They are microscopic, single-celled organisms that are often found in freshwater environments.
The scientific term for unicellular organisms is "unicellular organisms" or "unicellular organisms."
A yeast cell is a unicellular fungus, while an onion skin cell is part of a multicellular plant tissue. Yeast cells are typically oval or round and reproduce asexually through budding, whereas onion skin cells are rectangular and have a rigid cell wall made of cellulose. Additionally, yeast cells lack chloroplasts and do not perform photosynthesis, unlike onion cells, which contain chloroplasts for this purpose. Lastly, yeast cells have a more flexible cell membrane, while onion skin cells have a more rigid structure due to their cell wall.
Unicellular
unicellular
Unicellular.
no sponges are not unicellular.
unicellular
unicellular
Unicellular.