multicellular
Yes, seaweed is a multicellular organism.
No, seaweed is a multicellular organism.
Yes, seaweed is a multicellular algae
There are many multicellular organisms. Even protists, such as seaweed, can be multicellular. The only organism that cannot be multicellular is a bacterium.
i dont know cause i asked the question
The seaweed types like chlorophyta and rhodophyta.
Seaweed is biotic. It is biotic because it is a plant and plants are living things. Seaweed is a multicellular benthic marine algae.
Protists tend to be bigger, and can be multicellular (such as some seaweed). so yes.
Yes,Seaweed is a loose colloquial term encompassing macroscopic, multicellular, benthic marine algae.[1] The term includes some members of the red, brown andgreen algae. Seaweeds can also be classified by use (as food, medicine, fertilizer, industrial, etc.).A seaweed may belong to one of several groups of multicellular algae: the red algae, green algae, and brown algae. As these three groups are not thought to have a common multicellular ancestor, the seaweeds are a polyphyletic group. In addition, some tuft-forming bluegreen algae (Cyanobacteria) are sometimes considered as seaweeds - "seaweed" is a colloquial term and lacks a formal definition.
"Seaweed" is loose colloquial term for macroscopic multicellular algae. Algae, however, are not even plants but are protists. "Seaweed" plants would be correctly termed aquatic plants to which both vascular and non vascular aquatic plants exist.
Yes, brown algae are multicellular organisms. They can have complex structures, with some species reaching sizes of over 50 feet in length. Brown algae are a type of seaweed commonly found in marine environments.
Algae can be unicellular or multicellular, depending on what type of algae it is.