Very much multi-cellular, as are all animals and plants!
Plants are multicellular organisms because they have specialized structures and cells that perform specific functions. This allows them to efficiently carry out processes like photosynthesis, growth, and reproduction. Single-celled organisms lack this specialization and are limited in the complexity of tasks they can perform.
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.
a fly a has millions, even billions of cells, a single-celled organism would be a bacterium
No, monerans do not have backbones. Monerans are single-celled organisms without complex structural features like backbones.
There is only a single species of raccoon in North America - the common (or northern) raccoon.
Is a arachnids a single or multi celled
It is multi-celled
It is multi-celled
multi celled
multi celled
Is a arachnids a single or multi celled
single celled
multi celled
They are multi-celled.
multi celled of coures
They're all multi-celled.
Single