204k views
1 vote
A plant and an animal are both living things. According to the Cell Theory, what can you conclude about these two

very different organisms? SC.912.L.14.1
Plants have cells but animals do not
They are both made of one or more cells.
They both come from the same kind of cell.
O They both come from a non-living organism.

1 Answer

13 votes

Answer:

They are both made of one or more cells.

Step-by-step explanation:

A plant and an animal are both living things. According to the Cell Theory, what we can conclude about these two very different organisms is that they are both made of one or more cells.

A cell can be defined as the fundamental or basic functional, structural and smallest unit of life for all living organisms. Some living organisms are unicellular while others are multicellular in nature.

A unicellular organism refers to a living organism that possess a single-cell while a multicellular organism has many (multiple) cells.

Generally, cells have the ability to independently replicate themselves.

In a cell, the "workers" that perform various functions or tasks for the survival of the living organism are referred to as organelles and they include nucleus, cytoplasm, cell membrane, golgi apparatus, mitochondria, lysosomes, ribosomes, chromosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, vesicles, etc.

User MrOnyszko
by
5.0k points