organism that consists of more than one cell
A multicellular organism is a living thing made up of many cells working together, rather than just a single cell. This allows organisms to grow larger and develop specialized body parts and systems that single-celled creatures cannot have.
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The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans stained to highlight the nuclei of its cells A multicellular organism is an organism that consists of more than one cell, and more than one cell type, unlike unicellular organisms. All species of animals, land plants and most fungi are multicellular, as are many algae, whereas a few organisms are partially uni- and partially multicellular, like slime molds and social amoebae such as the genus Dictyostelium.
Multicellular organisms arise in various ways, for example by cell division or by aggregation of many single cells. Colonial organisms are the result of many identical individuals joining together to form a colony. However, it can often be hard to separate colonial protists from true multicellular organisms, because the two concepts are not distinct; colonial protists have been dubbed "pluricellular" rather than "multicellular". There are also macroscopic organisms that are multinucleate though technically unicellular, such as the Xenophyophorea that can reach 20 cm.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).