No
Domain. There are only three of these. Eubacteria Archaebacteria Eukarya
Eubacteria have a rigid cell wall and are either motile or non-motile. They also have a thick layer of proteoglycan. Archaebacteria have unique properties and are much harder to identify than eubacteria. It is almost impossible to classify.
Other than the organisms that fall under the kingdoms of animals and plants, living organism fall under the categories of Fungi, Protists, Eubacteria (Monera), and Archaebacteria. Examples from these kingdoms are: Fungi: mold Protists: algae Eubacteria (Monera): E. Coli Archaebacteria: Halophiles
Eukaryotes are believed to have evolved from a symbiotic relationship between an ancient archaebacterium and a eubacterium. This theory is supported by similarities in their genetic sequences, membrane structure, and other cellular processes. As a result, eukaryotes share more genetic and structural similarities with archaebacteria than eubacteria.
Kingdom Monera is divided into two groups, called Eubacteria and Archaebacteria. These two groups are both composed of tiny, ancient, single-celled organisms without organelles and generally with cell walls, but they differ greatly from each other in almost every other way. Scientists divided Archaebacteria and Eubacteria into these two groups mainly because of the environments they inhabit. Although Archaebacteriaâ??s name would suggest it is â??olderâ??, it is actually a younger group than Eubacteria, and very little is known about Archaebacteria because these species typically live in very hostile, extreme environments such as in acidic ocean thermal vents and miles below arctic ice sheets. Humans are much more familiar with Eubacteria, since we interact with these species every dayâ??most Eubacteria are completely harmless or beneficial, by way of fixing nitrogen for plant use in photosynthesis and other helpful functions. Archaebacteria differ from Eubacteria mainly in the chemical makeup of their cell walls, which scientists think hold the key to why Archaebacteria can live in such â??extremeâ?? conditions.
The thing is Eukaryotes don't have a nucleus, but prokaryotes do. So if Archaebacteria and Eubacteria are prokaryotes, and Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals are Eukaryotes, than that means Archaebacteria and Eubacteria have a nucleus and Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals don't have a nucleus.
The kingdoms Eubacteria and Archaebacteria (aka domains Bacteria and Archaea) contain prokaryotic organisms, or organisms without a true nucleus. The kingdom Monera was used to include all the organisms of both kingdoms but was split once taxonomists realized that archaebacteria are more closely related to eukaryotes than eubacteria.
Archaeabacteria is a kingdom in the domain Archaea, and Eubacteria is a kingdom in the domain Bacteria. Both kingdoms contain bacteria that are prokaryotic, unicellular, and autotrophs or heterotrophs. However, Arechaeabacteria have cell walls without peptidoglycan which is the opposite from Eubacteria. Eubacteria often are the types of bacteria that make up dangerous diseases. Also, Archaeabacteria can live in extreme environments that many other organisms could not stand.
Well, if you're talking about animal kingdoms, it'd be eubacteria and archaebacteria. They're both bacteria. I was just learning about this in science class yesterday! :D
Archaebacteria and Eubacteria. Previously they had been categorized as one kingdom Monera, but has since been split. The Six Kingdoms: Plants, Animals, Protists, Fungi, Archaebacteria, Eubacteria. Like archaebacteria, eubacteria are complex and single celled. Most bacteria are in the EUBACTERIA kingdom. They are the kinds found everywhere and are the ones people are most familiar with.
Rod-shaped bacteria (Bacilli)lactobacilliusSphere-shaped bacteria (Cocci) (diplococci), (streptococci) (staphylococci.)Spiral-shaped or cockscrew bacteria (Spirilla) treponema pallidaGram shaped-lactobacillus acidophilus, Esherichia coliFilamentousRound shaped-streptococcus thermophilus
They use to belong to the same kingdom: Moneran, but scientists thought that they were important enough to belong in their own kingdom, especially since archaebacteria is the oldest microorganism. So the answer is No, they belong in different kingdoms. (: