For the most part, no. Eukaryotes include plants animals and fungi. Plants and animals are multicellular and only a few fungi are unicellular such as yeast
The kingdom Protista consists primarily of unicellular eukaryotic organisms. This diverse group includes protozoans, algae, and slime molds, which possess a variety of different characteristics and lifestyles.
One example of a eukaryote that is not part of the plant, animal, or fungi kingdom is a protist. Protists are a diverse group of eukaryotic microorganisms that do not fit into the other three kingdoms. They can be unicellular or multicellular and include organisms like algae and amoebas.
An amoeba is an eukaryote, which is an unicellular organism. The amoeba belongs to the kingdom Protozoa and the phylum Amoebozoa.
No plant's are eukaryotes. Every plant is a eukaryote.
eukaryote
Unicellular and very small. I think also eukaryote
The kingdom Protista consists primarily of unicellular eukaryotic organisms. This diverse group includes protozoans, algae, and slime molds, which possess a variety of different characteristics and lifestyles.
Protist is a unicellular eukaryote, whereas algae can be unicellular or multicellular. Bacteria and archaebacteria are both prokaryotes and are typically unicellular organisms.
yes
unicellular
eukaryotic
No, Kingdom Protista, though mostly unicellular, is eukaryote. A membrane bound nucleus ( sometimes two nuclei! ) and many membrane bound organelles.
Eukaryote
One example of a eukaryote that is not part of the plant, animal, or fungi kingdom is a protist. Protists are a diverse group of eukaryotic microorganisms that do not fit into the other three kingdoms. They can be unicellular or multicellular and include organisms like algae and amoebas.
An amoeba is an eukaryote, which is an unicellular organism. The amoeba belongs to the kingdom Protozoa and the phylum Amoebozoa.
No plant's are eukaryotes. Every plant is a eukaryote.
eukaryote