Multicellular animal parasites are organisms that live on or in a host organism, obtaining nutrients and shelter at the host's expense. These parasites can cause harm to the host and often have complex life cycles involving multiple stages and hosts. Examples include tapeworms, roundworms, and flukes.
multicellular
Yes. By definition, an animal is eukaryotic and multicellular.
The animal kingdom consists of only multicellular heterotrophs.
Protista are unicellular.
It depends, pathogens can be multicellular (cestoda, fungi), unicellular (bacteria) or they can have non-cellular build (viruses, prions).
Yes, parasites can be protozoa, fungi, or multicellular organisms. Common examples include protozoan parasites like Plasmodium (causative agent of malaria), fungal parasites like Candida (causative agent of yeast infections), and multicellular parasites like tapeworms and roundworms. Each of these types of parasites have adaptations to live and feed off their hosts.
multicellular
Multicellular
Multicellular. All animals are multicellular. There is no such thing as a unicellular animal.
Yes. By definition, an animal is eukaryotic and multicellular.
multicellular and so is the animal cell
All animals are multicellular and tigers are also animal. Tigers are multicellular animal they are made up of many cells.
It can be, for its parasites.
Animal kingdom
Depends on the animal because each farm animal has different types of parasites that could affect it.
no
A parasitic animal is one that lives on or inside of another animal in order to survive. These parasites eat food from the animal they are living in as well as sleek shelter.