Yes, wolves are eukaryotic organisms because their cells, like all animal cells have a nucleus.
Wolves are eukaryotic organisms. This means that their cells have a nucleus enclosed within a membrane, as well as other membrane-bound organelles, distinguishing them from prokaryotic cells which lack a nucleus.
A wolf is made up of eukaryotic cells. Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles, which are characteristics found in the cells of multicellular organisms like wolves.
The gray wolf is a eukaryote. All animals, including wolves, are made up of eukaryotic cells, which have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles.
Alaskan Tundra Wolves, Alexander Archipelago Wolves, Arabian Wolves, Arctic Wolves, Baffin Island Wolves, Bernard's Wolves, British Columbian Wolves, Cascade Mountain Wolves, Dire Wolves, Eastern Timber Wolves, Ethiopian Wolves, Common Gray Wolves, Great Plains Wolves, Greenland Wolves, Hokkaido Wolves, Honshu Wolves, Hudson Bay Wolves, Iberian Wolves, Indian Wolves, Interior Alaskan Wolves, Iranian Wolves, Italian Wolves, Kenai Peninsula Wolves, Labrador Wolves, Mackenzie Valley Wolves, Mackenzie Tundra Wolves, Maned Wolves, Manitoba Wolves, Mexican Wolves, Mogollon Mountain Wolves, Newfoundland Wolves, Red Wolves, Southern Rocky Mountain Wolves, Texas Gray Wolves, Tibetan Wolves, Tundra Wolves, and Vancouver Island Wolves are all that I know of, and some of these might not even be around anymore.
Wolves belong to the Animalia kingdom because they are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms that require food to survive, can move independently, and reproduce sexually. These characteristics place them in the kingdom that includes all animals.
Eukaryotic. All members of the Kingdom Animalia are eukaryotic.
Paramecium is a protist.It is an eukariyote.
Eukaryotic
It is eukaryotic.
eukaryotic
Eukaryotic
eukaryotic