yes parasites are a fprm of microscopic plant life
It grows and lives on a host. Since the host provides the nutrients for life and the fungus grows off of that, it makes it a parasite. more info http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/parasite
They tend to exist as parasites, living off other life forms
Fungi Fungi used to be classed as members of the Plant Kingdom but are now placed in a separate Kingdom of Life, the others being the Plant Kingdom and the Animal Kingdom.
That can happen. Parasites which feed on other parasites are called epiparasites or hyperparasites. Examples for that are Ichneumon flies like Pachyneuron minutissimum. Sometimes certain developmental stages of trematodes can feed on other trematode life stages.
leeuwenhoek
Amoebas primarily feed on bacteria, algae, and other microscopic organisms by engulfing them using their pseudopods. They absorb nutrients directly through their cell membrane after digesting their prey.
Phytoplankton are tiny, photosynthetic organisms that float in water. They form the base of the marine food chain and play a crucial role in producing oxygen and absorbing carbon dioxide.
Then nobody would have any kind of plant life!!!
I'm guessing that it's cells, since cells are the basic unit of life.
plankton
Microscopic living cells are called Protists. They are divided into three categories: animal like (or protozoan), plant like (algae), and fungus like. Protists have a wide species range because they are pretty much just organisms that don't fit into the classification of animal, plant, or fungus.
A microbiologist studies microscopic forms of life.
Bryophytes
We used a microscope to study microscopic pond life.
its sharp and its a form of plant life
It grows and lives on a host. Since the host provides the nutrients for life and the fungus grows off of that, it makes it a parasite. more info http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/parasite
There are many different species of fresh and salt water shrimps. All shrimps eat microscopic plant and animal life.