Yes, a single-celled organism can shrink and divide, a process known as binary fission. During this process, the organism replicates its genetic material and then divides into two identical daughter cells. Prior to division, some organisms may undergo changes in cell size or shape, but the primary means of reproduction is through this division rather than shrinking.
a single celled organism is called unicellular an example is yeast
No. No single-celled organism is anywhere near that size. It is a plant and hence it is an Eukaryote.
In what ways, if any, does a single-celled organism differ from its parents?
UnicellularA single-celled organism is called unicellular.Examples of unicellular organisms are bacteria and protozoa.
AmoebaA single-celled organism is also called a unicellular organism._________________More Detailed:_________________Not only the single celled organisms from the family Amoeba, but also bacterium are single celled or unicellular.
No; a single-celled organism is a unicellularoraganism I believe.
it would shrink
The mechanism by which one small, single-celled organism could ingest a smaller single-celled organism is phagocytosis. Phagocytosis is the process of ingesting particles of a cell.
No, not quite. A bacterium is a single-celled organism, for sure, but not all single-celled organisms are bacteria.
A single-celled organism without an organized nucleus is a prokaryote.
A single-celled organism is said to be unicellular.
Unicellular best describes a one celled organism.
a single celled organism is called unicellular an example is yeast
The world's largest single-celled organism is the green algae Caulerpa.
The word is bacteria. It is a single celled organism.
No. No single-celled organism is anywhere near that size. It is a plant and hence it is an Eukaryote.
Bacteria is a single celled organism that lacks a nucleus, if that helps at all.