No. Eukaryota and Prokaryota are separate groups.
Eukaryota are cells that contain a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, while prokaryota are cells that lack a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Eukaryota include organisms such as plants, animals, fungi, and protists, while prokaryota include bacteria and archaea.
Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes both have cell membranes, cytoplasm, ribosomes and DNA
The five kingdoms of life are classified under three domains: Bacteria and Archaea in the domain Prokaryota, and Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia in the domain Eukaryota.
A zebra is part of the kingdom Animalia, which falls under the domain Eukaryota.
The main domains are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. The main kingdoms within the domain Eukarya are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and possibly others depending on the classification system used.
Yes, cacti are part of the kingdom Plantae, which falls under the domain Eukaryota.
Yes, cacti are part of the kingdom Plantae, which falls under the domain Eukaryota.
Daffodils belong to the domain of Eukaryota or the "true cells". The requirement is that the cells contain a nucleus and other organelles within a membrane. Furthermore, the nucleus has to be contained within its own membrane and the genes arranged on multiple chromosomes. The domain without the nuclear membrane and with one, circular chromosome is call Prokaryota.
Daffodils belong to the domain of Eukaryota or the "true cells". The requirement is that the cells contain a nucleus and other organelles within a membrane. Furthermore, the nucleus has to be contained within its own membrane and the genes arranged on multiple chromosomes. The domain without the nuclear membrane and with one, circular chromosome is call Prokaryota.
Similarities:UnicellularDifferences:Paramecium - EukaryotaBacteria- Prokaryota
Eukaryota is a domain, not a kingdom. There are kingdoms that fall under the domain Eukaryota.
Eukaryota