No, theyre many celled. They are classified as animals.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoWiki User
∙ 10y agono it is more of a "pouch" of unicellular organisms gathered together to form one jellyfish. one jellyfish on the average contains about 4398 unicellular organisms packed together.
yes.There are several organisms. Spirogyra ,some algae are some
Single celled organisms do not grow old and die, they are not made of enough parts to "wear out" like us. They simply split into two via mitosis.
Leeuwenhook was a Dutch scientist who helped to discover single-celled organisms
Because they don't need to. The operative term here is single celled...single celled organisms cannot survive if they specialize at the same level as a cell in a multicellular organism. Now it can breathe but it can't eat
Nope. Worms are multi-cellular organisms, just like you and me. They're just very simple
Jellyfish are single celled organisms.
No.
A group of mainly single-celled organisms is called a colony or a microbial community. These organisms can work together to form a larger structure and may have specialized roles within the group.
No, protozoa are single-celled organisms that exist independently as individuals rather than forming multicellular colonies. They are part of the protist kingdom and exhibit a diverse range of structures and behaviors as single-celled organisms.
No, jellyfish are not protozoans. They are part of the phylum Cnidaria, which includes animals like jellyfish, corals, and sea anemones. Protozoans are single-celled organisms that belong to a different group in the classification of living organisms.
No.
Usually Bacteria is unicellular, but in some cases multicellular.
yes bacteria is a single celled organisms.
what is the group of mainly single celled organisms called
Bacteria are single-celled organisms.
Amoebas are single celled organisms. They do not have any particular shape. Another group of single-celled organisms like amoebas are protists.
Yes it is there are many examples of living organisms without brains such as single celled bacteria, jellyfish and plants