Amoebas are unicellular. The single cell splits in half to form two new cells. A student claims amoebas are alive. Is the student correct?(1 point)
Responses
The student is not correct; amoebas are not alive because two different amoebas are not contributing together to make a new offspring.
The student is not correct; amoebas are not alive because two different amoebas are not contributing together to make a new offspring.
The student is correct; amoebas are probably alive because they have reproductive capabilities and create offspring through reproduction.
The student is correct; amoebas are probably alive because they have reproductive capabilities and create offspring through reproduction.
The student is not correct; amoebas are not alive because they are only made of one cell.
The student is not correct; amoebas are not alive because they are only made of one cell.
The student is correct; amoebas are alive because they become multicellular.
7 answers
Responses
soil (clay)
soil (clay)
water (river)
water (river)
air (wind)
air (wind)
fungus (mushroom)
Responses
the observation of cells by Hooke and Pasteur
the observation of cells by Hooke and Pasteur
the use of magnifying glasses
the use of magnifying glasses
the study of viruses and bacteria
the study of viruses and bacteria
the invention of the microscope