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 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.
The student is correct; amoebas are alive because they become multicellular.

The student is correct; amoebas are probab

The student is correct; amoebas are alive because they are unicellular organisms that can reproduce and carry out essential life functions such as metabolism and growth.

The student is correct; amoebas are alive because they are unicellular organisms capable of cell division to reproduce.