No. at one time the were grouped with plants, but as modern science gained a better understanding of living organisms, they are understood to be in there own Kingdom.
No. Fungi is a kingdom just like Animalia, Plantae, Monera and Protista.
This is a division.
Fungi is not a class. It's a Kingdom.
No. Fungi is considered its own kingdom.
No , structure is different .
division
phylum
Yes
The plant kingdom!
Fungi.
The Fungi Lichen typically belongs in the kingdom Fungi. However, it can be made up of organisms from a total of three kingdoms.
Animal cells are eukaryotes of the Eukarya domain (protista, fungi, animalia, plantae).
pteridophytes are plants having true roots, stem, and leaves.these fall under kingdom plantae.
The plant kingdom!
Fungi.
Under both the Whittaker and the Cavalier-Smith systems, trees fall under the kingdom Plantae.
The Fungi Lichen typically belongs in the kingdom Fungi. However, it can be made up of organisms from a total of three kingdoms.
Under both the Whittaker and the Cavalier-Smith systems, trees fall under the kingdom Plantae.
plantae
Animal cells are eukaryotes of the Eukarya domain (protista, fungi, animalia, plantae).
pteridophytes are plants having true roots, stem, and leaves.these fall under kingdom plantae.
Animals are Eukaryotes. The Kingdoms Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia all fall under the domain Eukarya.
I think the same kingdom as normal fungus.
The leaf itself does not belong to a kingdom because it is not its own organism, just a part of one. However, the maple tree belongs to the kingdom Plantae (plants).
Yeasts fall under the kingdom Fungi. They don't need sunlight to grow. There are two major classifications of yeasts and they are the Saccharomycotina (true yeasts) and the Taphrinomycotina Schizosaccharomycetes (fission yeasts). Most yeast are single-celled, but they sometimes 'glue'together to form chains and become multi-cellular.