Not all plants are microscopic in the ocean, infact some of the kelps growing over there are largest among the plant kingdom.
microscopic
No. Amoeba is the simplest microscopic unicellular cell whereas elephant is the largest mammal (which is a multicellular organism)
A microscopic slush would refer to a very small amount of slush, which is typically a semi-frozen mixture of liquid and ice. It would be difficult to observe without the use of a microscope due to its tiny size.
Bacteria in yogurt are typically around 1-10 micrometers in size. These bacteria are microscopic and not visible to the naked eye.
The largest landmass in the Earth's oceans is Zealandia, which is mostly submerged beneath the southwest Pacific Ocean. It is estimated to be about half the size of Australia.
No, they are plants, and vary in size from microscopic to sea-weed. I wonder if you were thinking of the Amoeba, which is a tiny, single-celled animal only just visible to the naked eye?
According to Wikipedia, the Arctic Ocean is mostly covered by ice during the northern winter months. It is the smallest and most shallow ocean of the major oceanic divisions. The Southern Ocean, which surrounds the continent of Antarctica, becomes mostly ice in the southern winter, because the continent almost doubles in size when the ocean freezes.
microscopic
It can be any size from Microscopic to a few feet long.
Some examples of cells that are not microscopic include bird eggs (largest single cells), ostrich egg, and sieve tube elements in plants. These cells are visible to the naked eye due to their larger size.
Microscopic Hystology
All bacterium is microscopic.
Wind mostly erodes pieces of rock that are the size of sand or smaller. Wind erosion often is evident in areas where there are few plants to hold soil in place.
Do you mean what is the size of the bacillus? It is microscopic.
About 95%. Although they all lack backbones, invertebrates can differ greatly in form, size, and habitat. They range from giant clams in the ocean to microscopic worms that live in other animals.
No, a virus is not a plant. Viruses are non-living organisms/structures that contain genetic material and that are sub-microscopic in size and cause illness and infections in people, animals, plants and even in bacteria.
The size of the boat matters cause if a cruise liner goes through a coral reef lots of fish die or loose their homes