Technically speaking a plant is defined as a multi-celled organism. Photosynthetic single celled organisms are considered to be a different phylum.
no; monerans are single-celled organisms
Very much multi-cellular, as are all animals and plants!
single celled organisms such as the amoeba
No. The term zygote refers to a much broader period at the earliest stages of an organism's development, from the first fusion of sperm and egg to (form a single celled zygote) through many cell divisions (producing a multi-celled zygote) which matures into a blastocyst. So, zygotes can be one celled, two celled, or many celled.
single-celled
single-celled
Single-celled. Most bacteria are single celled.
no, they are infact single celled
Archaebacteria are single-celled microorganisms that are prokaryotes
==The Final Answer. . .== Eubacteria is a single celled organism, just like its [so called] twin, Archaebacteria.
All bacteria are single celled organisms. These two kingdoms are separated by the presence of a nucleus and not by single and mulitcellular properties.
Archaebacteria
Archaebacteria
Archaebacteria is a domain of single-celled microorganisms with no cell nucleus or other organelles in their cells. The non-scientific name for Archaebacteria is Archaea.
Unicellular or single celled prokaryotes are part of the archaebacteria kingdom. Many archaebacteria live in hot climates. The waste products that they produce may have flammable gases.
Unicellular or single celled prokaryotes are part of the archaebacteria kingdom. Many archaebacteria live in hot climates. The waste products that they produce may have flammable gases.