eubacteria
There are two types of bacteria...Archaebacteria and Eubacteria. Archaebacteria are ancient bacteria that are in extreme environments (hot springs, etc.). Eubacteria are the newer bacteria, those that cause illness or in food production, etc.
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
the five kingdoms are bacteria, protists , fungi, animals, and plants. they have also added ancient bacteria but i am not sure how it is spelled (the scientific name I mean)
The six kingdoms of life are classified based on common characteristics: Archaebacteria (ancient bacteria), Eubacteria (true bacteria), Protista (single-celled organisms), Fungi (eukaryotic organisms like mushrooms), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular organisms that consume organic material for energy). Each kingdom plays a unique role in the ecosystem, such as providing nutrients, decomposing organic matter, or serving as a food source for other organisms.
Higch
Kingdom is a classification within the eukaryotes domain. Bacteria is a domain itself, previously called eubacteria (true bacteria). The other domain of prokaryotes is now called archaea. Previously this also was considered a kind of bacteria: archeabacteria. The third domain of living beings is the eukarya, where kingdoms plantae, fungi and animalia etc. belong.
3,, ancient bacteria / true bacteria / protists
There are two types of bacteria...Archaebacteria and Eubacteria. Archaebacteria are ancient bacteria that are in extreme environments (hot springs, etc.). Eubacteria are the newer bacteria, those that cause illness or in food production, etc.
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
the five kingdoms are bacteria, protists , fungi, animals, and plants. they have also added ancient bacteria but i am not sure how it is spelled (the scientific name I mean)
The current system, the Three Domain System, groups organisms primarily based on differences in ribosomal RNA structure. Ribosomal RNA is a molecular building block for ribosomes. Under this system, organisms are classified into three domains and six kingdoms. The domains are Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya. The kingdoms are Archaebacteria (ancient bacteria), Eubacteria (true bacteria), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia
no they do not
Ancient bacteria can live in very extreme environments. often with little or no oxygen. true bacteria can not do this. Ancient bacteria are often found in hot sulfur springs, muddy environments such as mudflats and swamps, and places deep in the ocean where lava and hot water seep through cracks on the ocean floor. But true bacteria are found EVERYWHERE except extreme environments.
The six kingdoms of life are classified based on common characteristics: Archaebacteria (ancient bacteria), Eubacteria (true bacteria), Protista (single-celled organisms), Fungi (eukaryotic organisms like mushrooms), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular organisms that consume organic material for energy). Each kingdom plays a unique role in the ecosystem, such as providing nutrients, decomposing organic matter, or serving as a food source for other organisms.
bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea
true
The kingdom Monera (bacteria) is typically considered to be at the bottom of the phylogenetic tree, as it is one of the most ancient and simple forms of life.