Although algae range from single-celled organisms to multicellular organisms, if they are both multicellular and marine, and are easily seen by the naked eye, they are generally called seaweeds. Single-celled or few-celled organisms are not usually called seaweeds. Seaweeds themselves have many forms, including those that appear as if they are terrestrial plants with leaves and stems, looking like moss, mushrooms, leaf lettuce, or even a palm tree. Some are quite large: the multicellular giant kelp reaches 60 meters in length.
One, the unicellular organism; which could be bacteria, algae or plankton.
shrimp eat a organism called plankton. this is a microscopic pant cell that lives in the salt water with the shrimp. if you want a larger answer, look it up on google.
The microscopic unicellular marine or freshwater colonial algae is a diatom. The cell walls are impregnated with silica. Plankton is primarily a microscopic organism that occupy the upper water layers in fresh water and ecosystems.
microscopic plankton
Yes, even at the North Pole or in Antarctica. As a group they are called plankton. The largest ones can barely be seen without a magnifier or microscope. Some make food for themselves from light and carbon dioxide, like plants. There are freshwater plankton as well as plankton in the oceans.
No.. Plankton is a single cell organism.
Plankton...microscopic.
It is a microscopic.
Yes plankton is an organism because it fits all of the six characteristics of living organisms.yes it is
Plankton are microscopic sea creatures, and the term includes both animals and plants.
Plankton
no