Every living creature on Earth belongs to a kingdom. Scientists debate how many kingdoms there are, but most agree there are five. Here is how the five kingdoms are organized. Moneraare single-celled organisms that don't have a nucleus. Bacteria make up the entire kingdom. There are more forms of bacteria than any other organism on Earth. Some bacteria are beneficial to us, such as the ones found in yogurt. Others can cause us to get sick. Protists are mostly single-celled organisms that have a nucleus. They usually live in water. Some protists move around, while others stay in one place. Examples of protists include some algae, paramecium, and amoeba. Fungi are usually motionless organisms that absorb nutrients for survival. They include mushrooms, molds, and yeasts. Plants contain chlorophyll, a green pigment necessary for photosynthesis, a process in which plants convert energy from sunlight into food. Their cell walls are made sturdy by a material called cellulose, and they are fixed in one place. Plants are divided into two groups: flower- and fruit-producing plants and those that don't produce flowers or fruits. They include garden flowers, agricultural crops, grasses, shrubs, ferns, mosses, and conifers. Animals are the most complex organisms on Earth. Animals are multi-celled organisms, eat food for survival, and have nervous systems. They are divided into vertebrates and invertebrates and include mammals, amphibians, reptiles, birds and fish.
Actually, there are now six kingdoms. The five kingdom was during the 1969 and it included all the bacterias within one group. The five kingdom system is as follows:
There are 5 kingdoms in Whittakers system
1 Monera prokaryotic
2 Protista unicellular , with nucleus
3 Fungi chitin , no chlorophyll
4 Plantae , multicellular , chlorophyll
5 Animalia , multicellular ingestive heterotrophs
1 Archaebacteria- prokaryotes, Ancient Bacteria, have hard cell wall, live in harsh environments
2 Eubacteria-Prokaryotes, Don't live in harsh places, similar to archaebacteria
3Protista- eukaryote, unicellular ,slime molds, algae, amoeba
4Fungi- heterotrophs, multicellular, mushrooms, mold
5plants
6 Animals
Organisms: Methanogens, Halophiles, Thermophiles, Psychrophiles
Cell Type: Prokaryotic
Metabolism: Depending on species - oxygen, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, sulfur, sulfide may be needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Depending on species - nutrition intake may by absorption, non-photosynthetic photophosphorylation, or chemosynthesis.
Reproduction: Asexual reproduction by binary fission, budding, or fragmentation.
II. Eubacteria
Organisms: Bacteria, Cyanobacteria(blue-green algae), Actinobacteria
Cell Type: Prokaryotic
Metabolism: Depending on species - oxygen may be toxic, tolerated, or needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Depending on species - nutrition intake may by absorption, photosynthesis, or chemosynthesis.
Reproduction: Asexual reproduction
III. Protista
Organisms: Amoebae, green algae, brown algae, diatoms, euglena, slime molds
Cell Type: Eukaryotic
Metabolism: Oxygen is needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Depending on species - nutrition intake may be by absorption, photosynthesis, or ingestion.
Reproduction: Mostly asexual reproduction. Meiosis occurs in some species.
IV. Fungi
Organisms: Mushrooms, yeast, molds
Cell Type: Eukaryotic
Metabolism: Oxygen is needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Absorption
Reproduction: Asexual or sexual reproduction occur.
V. Plantae
Organisms: Mosses, angiosperms (flowering plants), gymnosperms, liverworts, ferns
Cell Type: Eukaryotic
Metabolism: Oxygen is needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Photosynthesis
Reproduction: Some species reproduce asexually by mitosis. Other species exhibit sexual reproduction.
VI. Animalia
Organisms: Mammals, amphibians, sponges, insects, worms
Cell Type: Eukaryotic
Metabolism: Oxygen is needed for metabolism.
Nutrition Acquisition: Ingestion
-justine :D
the domain,cell type, cell structure, body type, and the organism's nutrition
yug
The six Kingdoms are: Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Plantae, Animalia, Fungi.
they all have cells
There are six domains in biology. The kingdoms that contain Prokaryotes are Archaebacteria and Eubacteria , both of which reproduce asexually.
The characteristics in kingdoms are the traits that each organism shares within that kingdom for instance, Mollusca display soft bodies and a muscular foot so organisms resembling those characteristics are more than likely a Mollusc. Types can be referring to the different types within a phylum for example, sea stars, brittle stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers are all members of Echinodermata.
idk the answer so yeah
kingdoms
starts with 2 kingdoms vertebrates and invertebrates the vertebrat kingdoms is split up in to 5 kingdoms are reptile, mammal. bird, fish and anphibian
the kingdoms with two important characteristics are the phylomunus and the multicellar family. Depends on what characteristics you are referring to but those are generally different
The five animal kingdoms were:Animalia (Lion)Plantae (Oak Tree)Protista (Amoeba)Monera (Blue Green Bacteria)Fungi (Black Mold)See related questions below for information on the new six Kingdom and three Domain system.
As of 2004, the six recognised kingdoms are:AnimaliaPlantaeFungiChromistaProtozoaBacteria
The six kingdoms used to classify living things are plants, animals, protists, fungi, archaebacteria, and eubacteria. A way to remember these kingdoms is to memorize the first two letters of each kingdom, such as 'pl-an-pr-fu-ar-eu'.
There are six different kingdoms in Plantae. The kingdoms are Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia.
yug
The six Kingdoms are: Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Plantae, Animalia, Fungi.
the 6 kingdoms are jamacia carribean england antigua france asia