Archae are not known to cause disease in human.
Archae
Yes, archaea have similar chemical make up to bacteria.
Like archaea, bacteria are also single-celled organisms without nuclei.
Firstly, archae are not a kingdom but a domain. A domain comes before kingdoms in the taxonomic classification system 3 domains are Eukaryae, Prokaryae and Archae. As you can see from their names, the domain Eukaryae is eukaryotic and the domain Prokaryae is prokaryotic. Archae are different. They are bacteria which live in extreme conditions such as extremely high temperatures, with little oxygen or water, etc. Archae are neither prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
Archaeology is Greek history and archae means first so, archae means to go back to the first people.
archae and bacteria
they are not different they are the same
Bacteria that contain chlorophyll a belong in the group Cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae. Chlorophyll a is a photosynthetic pigment that they use to capture energy from sunlight for photosynthesis. These bacteria are capable of producing their own food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide.
they are not different they are the same
no, any kind of bacteria is unicellular
Domains: Bacteria Archae Eukarya Kingdoms: Eubacteria Archaebacteria/Archae Protista Animalia Fungi Plantae You're on your own from there.
Archae, Bacteria and Eukaryota
Archae
the 3 domains are bacteria, Archae, eukaryota then those are split up into the 6 kingdoms which is eubacteria,archae bacteria,protista,fungi,plantae,animalia.
Eubacteria and archaebacteria. [archae is Greek for "ancient"]
Archaea and Bacteria.
The six major Kingdoms currently recognized are Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi (fungi), Protista (protists), Archaea (archaea), and Bacteria (bacteria). These Kingdoms classify all living organisms into broad groups based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships.