True
protista
Ferns are classified as plants, and all plants belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Plantae, as well as the Kingdoms Animalia, Fungi and Protista.
Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, Eubacteria
Life on earth is classified into six kingdoms: Animals (Animalia) Plants (Plantae), Fungi, Protists (protista), Bacteria, and Archaebacteria (Archae). The last two are referred to as domains instead of kingdoms. Bacteria and Archaebacteria were once classified as Monerans (Monera or Prokaryota) but has been obsolete since 1991.
Kingdom Animalia contains multicellular organisms that ingest their food.
People are classified into five kingdoms: Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi (fungi), Protista (protists), and Monera (bacteria and archaea). This classification system is based on their differences in cellular structure, mode of nutrition, and other characteristics.
Animalia
all organisms were classified as either plants or animals. The only domain with multicellular organisms is the domain Eukarya, which contains the 4 kingdoms Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Protista and Fungi are the only kingdoms that have both unicellular and multicellular organisms.
plantae and animalia
Not all kingdoms include unicellular organisms. The kingdoms that do not have unicellular organisms include the plantae and animalia kingdom.
The four kingdoms that contain eukaryotic organisms are plantae, animalia, fungi and protista.
The four kingdoms that contain eukaryotic organisms are plantae, animalia, fungi and protista.
animalia
The 5 kingdoms are fungi, plante, eubacteria, protista, and animalia. But only 3 out of the 5 are multicellular. The three kingdoms that are multicellular are: 1) fungi 2) animalia 3) plante
animalia, eubacteria, plantae, protista, fungi, archebacteria
Organisms are classified into kingdoms based on their cell type (prokaryotic or eukaryotic), cell structure, nutritional requirements, and modes of reproduction. The main criteria for classification include differences in basic cellular structure, complexity of the organism, and evolutionary relationships.
In science, living things are classified into kingdoms. These kingdoms are bacteria, protist, fugni, plant, and animal. Tortoises are in the animal kingdom. The next division beyond kingdoms is phylums.