Biology, asked by srishti6623, 5 hours ago

what is unicellular organism​

Answers

Answered by shahidnazirbhat990
2

Organisms formed of single cell are called unicellular organisms..

example ... bacteria,amoeba.etc

Answered by Itzdarkshadow56
3

Answer:

A unicellular organism, also known as a single-celled organism, is an organism that consists of a single cell, unlike a multicellular organism that consists of multiple cells. Unicellular organisms fall into two general categories: prokaryotic organisms and eukaryotic organisms

It became very difficult to group some living things into one or the other, so early in the past century the two kingdoms were expanded into five kingdoms: Protista (the single-celled eukaryotes); Fungi (fungus and related organisms); Plantae (the plants); Animalia (the animals); Monera (the prokaryotes

For simple unicellular microorganisms such as the amoeba, one cell division is equivalent to reproduction – an entire new organism is created. ... Mitotic cell division enables sexually reproducing organisms to develop from the one-celled zygote, which itself was produced by meiotic cell division from gametes.

The taxonomy of single celled organisms falls into one of the three major life domains: eukaryotes, bacteria and archaea.

Unicellular organisms are made up of only one cell that carries out all of the functions needed by the organism, while multicellular organisms use many different cells to function. ... Their structure is related to their function, meaning each type of cell takes on a particular form in order to best serve its purpose.

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