No
a single celled organism is called unicellular an example is yeast
Archea
Plants, Animals, Protists, Fungi, Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, and the new ChromistsThe seven kingdoms are:animaliaplantaeeumycotaprotistaprotomoneramoneramyxomycophyta
Alnus Rubra is a prokaryote
All types of fungus belong to the Kingdom Fungi which are Eukaryotes (that means they have a cell nucleus), and all, except for yeast and some chytrid species, are multicellular organisms. So to answer your question all fungi are multicellular organisms, except for yeast and some chytrid species that are unicellular.
No, fungi are Eukaryotes.
a prokaryote
Eukaryote
Eukaryotic .
If you meant to say "prokaryote" or "prokaryotic", then NO. Prokaryotes belong to Monera, or the bacteria - cyanobacteria. Fungi are mono- and dikaryotic.
Ringworm is actually a slang name for a fungal infection. Fungi are eukaryotic.
Fungi are unicellular or multicellular organisms with eukaryotic cell types. Prokaryote or Monera (comprised bacteria). Eukaryote (animals, plants, fungi and protists).
Eukaryote... though some fungi lack the traditional mitochondria that provides a cell with ATP. They are a category of fungi that make their ATP from hydrogenosomes (a structure name for the hydrogen it produces as waste).
Yes, fungi are eukaryotic. This makes a fungus infection hard to treat because, just like your cells, fungi have a membrane bound nucleus and many membrane bound organelles.
They all contain DNA in there genetic material
a prokaryote is a multicellular organism. a eukaryote is an organism with only one cell. Scientific classificatin- archaebacteria, eubacteria, protist, plant, animal, fungi A prokaryote is another type of scientific classification, it describes an organism. An organism would be classified, and the fact that it is a prokaryote could help classify it, but you would not classify a "prokaryote".
they are prokaryotic