Organisms in the domain Archaea are unicellular prokaryotes without a nucleus, membrane-bound organelles, or introns in their genes. They also have unique cell wall components. Eukaryotes in the domain Eukarya, on the other hand, have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, are typically larger and more complex, and can be unicellular or multicellular.
The six kingdoms are Animalia (Domain Eukarya), Plantae (Domain Eukarya), Fungi (Domain Eukarya), Protista (Domain Eukarya), Archaea (Domain Archaea), and Bacteria (Domain Bacteria).
A single-celled organism belongs to the domain of Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukarya. These domains encompass all forms of life on Earth, with single-celled organisms falling into the categories of bacteria, archaea, or protists within the Eukarya domain.
The domain of living things that is not recognized is protists. The three recognized domains are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Organisms in the domain Eukarya have membrane-bound organelles, a nucleus, and multiple linear chromosomes, while organisms in the domain Archaea lack membrane-bound organelles, have a single circular chromosome, and their cell walls are chemically different. Eukaryotes generally have more complex cellular structures and processes than archaea.
Eukarya is not within the domain Archaea or Bacteria. These two domains are distinct from Eukarya in terms of cellular structure, molecular makeup, and evolutionary history.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
The six kingdoms are Animalia (Domain Eukarya), Plantae (Domain Eukarya), Fungi (Domain Eukarya), Protista (Domain Eukarya), Archaea (Domain Archaea), and Bacteria (Domain Bacteria).
Assuming you are using the three-domain schema of Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya, the answer is that Domain Eukarya is not prokaryotic.
There are A LOT of differences but the main thing that distinguishes them is that organisms in Eukarya have a defined nucleus, which those in Archaea do not.
Bacteria archaea
Archaea Domain Bacteria Domain Eukarya Domain
A single-celled organism belongs to the domain of Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukarya. These domains encompass all forms of life on Earth, with single-celled organisms falling into the categories of bacteria, archaea, or protists within the Eukarya domain.
A cell that is not in the domain Bacteria or Archaea is in Eukarya.
The domain of living things that is not recognized is protists. The three recognized domains are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Eukarya has a doubled walled nucleus containing the genetic material and Bacteria and Archaea do not have contained genetic material. Eukarya has membrane bound organelles and the other two Domains do not. These are the pertinent differences.