no. there are different kingdoms like; the insect kingdom,the bacteria kingdom... so on and so on
No, not every living thing is in the kingdom Animalia. The kingdom Animalia includes multicellular, eukaryotic organisms that are heterotrophic and lack cell walls. Organisms in other kingdoms may have different characteristics, such as plants in the kingdom Plantae which are autotrophic and have cell walls.
All mollusks possess a soft body covered by a hard shell, a muscular foot for movement, and a mantle that secretes the shell. These characteristics distinguish mollusks from other phyla in the animal kingdom.
it is the classification of life The Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species for all domestic dogs, regardless of breed is: Animalia Chordata Mammalia Carnifora Caniformia Canidae Canis Familiaris. Different domestic dog breeds don't have different species names that I am aware of. If so, the only thing that would be different in that classification would be the species name. The rest would all be the same.
One common way to remember the five kingdoms is by using the acronym "DREAMS," which stands for Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species. The five kingdoms are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera. Another way is to remember the mnemonic "Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup" which represents Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.
Animals in the animal kingdom are multicellular, heterotrophic organisms that have the ability to move at some point in their life cycle. They also typically reproduce sexually and have specialized tissues and organ systems for various functions.
A non-living thing does not have a scientific name because scientific names are used to classify and describe living organisms based on their characteristics and relationships. Scientific names are given to species, genera, families, and other taxonomic categories within the living world.
Domain: Eukaryakingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: PoriferaClass: - Calcarea with Genus: * Scypha* Leucosolenia- Hexactinellida with Genus: * Euplectella- Demospongiae with Genus: * SpongiaHope that I helped!
archeabacteria, eubacteria, protista, plantea, animalia, fungi
there are actually 5, Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Animalia, and Plantae
In taxonomy, Kingdom and Family are two separate levels of classification. The red panda Ailurus fulgens is placed in the Kingdom Animalia as is every living thing that is not a plant, fungus, protist or bacteria.The red panda is most closely related to the raccoon and is therefore placed in the Family Procyanidae.
There is no such thing as "the human kingdom", humans and animals are in the animalia kingdom.Actually, this is right. There is not an official Human Kingdom, but humans do have their place. We are Homo Sapiens, which means "wise man", compared to our large brain.
Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Arthopoda Class: Crustacea
Of course. Every living thing has a common ancestor. Humans and flies are both in the animalia kingdom.
a group
Biology is the study of every living thing on earth.
No. The phytoplankton are living and are part of kingdom protista.
It Dies (ceases to be a living thing).
When a living thing dies, it dies. Thus, every living thing has one life.