Algae
The chloroplasts.
A small single-celled organism that does not contain nuclei is known as a prokaryote. Prokaryotes include bacteria and archaea, which are simpler in structure compared to eukaryotic cells that have a nucleus. These organisms have genetic material that is not enclosed within a membrane-bound nucleus.
Chloroplasts and stomata are two named features that enable the leaf to carry out photosynthesis. Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll, the pigment that captures sunlight energy for the process, while stomata are small openings that allow for gas exchange necessary for photosynthesis.
There are actually only a very small number of diseases that are caused by monerans in humans. These include smallpox, polio, measles, mumps, and yellow fever.
Cells with small green dots could be chloroplasts in plant cells, or mitochondria in animal cells. Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll and are responsible for photosynthesis, while mitochondria are the powerhouse of the cell involved in producing energy.
A small one-celled organism is called a microorganism or a single-celled organism. Examples include bacteria, archaea, and some protists.
The mechanism by which one small, single-celled organism could ingest a smaller single-celled organism is phagocytosis. Phagocytosis is the process of ingesting particles of a cell.
Because micro means small and a single celled organism is typically rather small.
A microorganism is any organism too small to be seen without using a microscope. Some are single celled, some are multi-celled.
monera is a single-celled organism. it is very simple and small e.g. bacteria and cyanbacteria
Bacteria is a single celled organism that lacks a nucleus, if that helps at all.
Chloroplast in a plant cell can convert light energy into chemical energy that is required in plant cells.