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The Fungi Lichen typically belongs in the kingdom Fungi. However, it can be made up of organisms from a total of three kingdoms.
Definitely 3-three different kingdoms of living things (kingdom fungi-fungi/kingdom protista-algae/kingdom monera-cyanobacteria ). Source-http://www.lichen.com/biology.html
Bacteria,fungi and virus
The scheme most often used currently divides all living organisms into fivekingdoms: Monera (bacteria), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. This coexisted with a scheme dividing life into two main divisions: the Prokaryotae (bacteria, etc.) and the Eukaryotae (animals, plants, fungi, and protists).
The Kingdom Protista was thought to be evolved 1.5 billion years ago through endosymbiosis. The Kingdom Protista contains life-forms similar to those that gave rise to the three kingdoms of multicellular organisms-fungi, plants, and animals.
eukaryote, heterotroph, and reproduce with spores. there can be exceptions.
what are 3 organisms that break down dead organisms
The six kingdoms of animals are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, and Bacteria. Each kingdom consists of different groups of organisms with distinct characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
These are the current phyla (divisions) within the kingdom Fungi: Dikaryomycota Zygomycota Chytridiomycota Monblepharidomycota Blastocladiomycota Neocallistigmycota Cryptomycota
Linnaeus' original hierarchy of organism classification included only two kingdoms. Later, this would be expanded to three by Ernst Haeckel, as some single-celled organisms couldn't be classified as animal or plant. Later still, Edouard Chatton's idea for dividing between single-celled organisms with and without a distinct nucleus was popularized, leading to four kingdoms. Finally, Robert Whittaker addressed the ambiguous classification of fungi between plantae and Protista by making them their own, fifth kingdom.
Archaebacteria
Well, to simplify things, you can think of kingdoms as being 3 main kinds - plants, animals and fungi. There are actually a couple of others that comprise oddball tiny organisms that don't really fit into these three (like bacteria and thingies of that nature), but you don't really need to worry about them at this point. So the question becomes "is a salamander a plant (Kingdom Plantae), a fungus (Kingdom Fungi) or an animal (Kingdom Animalia)?" I figure you can work that one out OK from here.