No. They in separate kingdoms and separate domains.
yes
The groups that a kingdom are split into are: Bacteria, Archaea, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia.
The bacteria Staphylococcus and Streptococcus are part of the Kingdom Bacteria (or Monera). E. coli and Salmonella are also bacteria and belong to the same kingdom.
The kingdom that includes bacteria is the Kingdom Monera. This kingdom is made up of unicellular prokaryotic organisms that lack a distinct nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Bacteria are considered to be one of the major groups within this kingdom.
Gloeocapsa bacteria belong to the kingdom Bacteria.
Animalia is the kingdom. The domain for it is Eukarya, the domain for it also has 3 other kingdoms. Plantae, Fungi, and Protista, There are 3 domains, Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. Bacteria is the kingdom for the Domain in a way. They are kind of the same, same way for the Archeae. The Fungi in Eurkarya feeds on dead or decayed materials. Bacteria causes germs to get you sick, those are just a couple of examples on what they do. Note that bacteria is party of the Bacteria domain, not the Eurkaya. Bacteria and Archaea may be called that for the domain, but they are also called the same name for their kingdom.
Kingdom Gram-Positive Bacteria is a kingdom within the domain Bacteria.
Staphylococcus is a genus of bacteria, not a kingdom. It belongs to the domain Bacteria, kingdom Bacteria.
Bacteria kingdom
No. Bacteria have their own kingdom.
Bacteria belong to the kingdom Bacteria.
Of the 5 kingdoms, bacteria belong to Kingdom Monera. Sometimes thisis simply knownas Kingdom Bacteria.