No it is Multi-Cellular, and are porcupine balls pointy?
No, a rust mite is not a single-celled organism. Rust mites are arachnids belonging to the subclass Acari, which means they are more closely related to spiders and ticks than single-celled organisms.
yes
It is a multicellular organism because it has complicated specialized parts
no...bird's are not single celled
eukarya
mites are barely visible to naked eye if on the right color surface, they are the size of a pencil dot
A rust mite is multicellular because it is composed of multiple specialized cells that perform distinct functions, allowing for greater complexity and efficiency in its biological processes. This multicellularity enables rust mites to develop specialized structures for feeding, reproduction, and movement, facilitating their adaptation to various environments. Additionally, being multicellular allows for more sophisticated regulation of growth and development compared to unicellular organisms.
it can turn all flaky and is very cheap it could turn out bad or mite not do the rite job
No, beans are not single cell organisms. Beans have many millions of cells.
Rust on your fence or rust on your crops? Rust usually, that occurs on metallic objects is iron oxide, it's an inorganic compound so no cells. Unicellular usually refers to organic organisms of single cellular structure. Another 'Rust' is an organism. Do you mean Rust fungus? It is a fungus and produces spores which spread and cause the crop damage, it's not unicellular. It has a complex structure.
No, a mite is not a consumer.
Yubin Yang has written: 'Population dynamics and damage effects of the citrus rust mite, Phyllocoptruta oleivora (Ashmead)(Acari:eriophyidae)' -- subject(s): Accessible book