Plankton is made up of both unicellular and pluricellularorganisms.
Plankton includes a wide variety of both unicellular and multicellular organisms.
Plankton includes a wide variety of both unicellular and multicellular organisms.
No. That suggests something rather complicated (and multicellular) for a one celled organism.
No, plankton are not bacteria. Plankton are diverse organisms that can include bacteria, algae, and small animals. Bacteria are single-celled microorganisms, while plankton encompass a wide variety of both single-celled and multicellular organisms that drift in water.
Nekton is any organisim that swims freely in the ocean, whereas plankton is any organisim in the ocean that floats on the top layer of water. Nekton are multicellular and plankton are multicellular or unicellular. The Zooplankton are Multicellular and Phytoplankton are Unicellular. Nekton are Consumers but also can be Producers. For they eat plankton making them consumers, but also, we eat them ((well some of them)), so that makes them producers aswell. General forms of Nekton include Fish, Sharks, Whales, Or Jellyfish. Some Nekton can be plankton at birth and then turn into nekton. Such as fish, they are born as an egg and may float on the top of the ocean, as they grow, they develop finns and then become nekton when they hatch and can swim freely in the ocean. Hope this helps you out!! [: Erin Mabe
Plankton can be both single-celled and multicellular organisms. Phytoplankton, which are photosynthetic, are primarily single-celled algae, while zooplankton can include both single-celled organisms like protozoa and multicellular organisms like small crustaceans. Together, they form a crucial part of aquatic ecosystems, serving as a foundational food source for many marine species.
No, plankton are single celled organisms that only live underwater. Lungs are only present in some multicellular organisms that breathe air, specifically vertebrates (many multicellular organisms that breathe air like insects do not have lungs).
Plankton can be either eukaryotic or prokaryotic, it's dependent on the specific type of plankton. Plankton are divided into three different categories, Zooplankton, Bacterioplankton and phytoplankton. Zooplankton are eukaryotic.
Plankton is not algae. Plankton eats algae though.
plankton does not have a prefix
It is multicellular
Platypuses are multicellular. All mammals, and indeed all vertebrates, are multicellular.