The nucleus.
Prokaryotic.
No. Some bacteria, like mycoplasmas, lack cell walls.
Prokaryotic- bacteriaEukaryotic- protist, amoeba, etc.An example of a prokaryote would be bacteria or any single cellular organism and an example of a eukaryote would be any multicellular organism.
There is no organism that is prokaryotic because prokaryotic is a cell not an organism.
-ribosome -no membrane bonded organelles -nu nucleus
The two structures that surround the prokaryotic cell are the cell membrane or plasma membrane and the cytoskeleton. All prokaryotic cells contain these.
cell membrane
In a Prokaryotic cell, these structures are the flagella.
Ribosome
Plasma membranes, exoskeletons, and (sometimes) cell walls.
External structures of a prokaryotic cell include glycocalyces, flagella, fimbriae, and pili. Most prokaryotic cells have a cell wall. Prokaryotic cells have a cytoplasmic membrane, cytosol, and inclusions. The nonmembranous organelles found in a prokaryotic cell are ribosomes and the cytoskeleton.
Since all prokaryotic cells lack membrane-bound organelles, the only common structures would be the cell membrane and the ribosomes. The ribosomes, however, are different than the ones found in eukaryotic cells.
the chromosome
They have membrane-bound structures and prokaryotic are cells that don't have membrane-bound structures.
Eubacteria and Archaebacteria lack a cell nucleus and other cell structures called organelles.
Chromosomes (however, prokaryotic cells do not have a nucleus).
A cell is either prokaryotic (cario would be the nuclear membrane) or eukaryotic.Prokaryotic cells would be archeabacteria and eubacteria whereas everything else would be eukaryotic.