Archaebacteria and Eubacteria
Archebacteria and Eubacteria
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This anwser is false. The reason why is because scientists want to make two kingdoms of Monera not two kingdoms of fungi
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.
There are several that formed the modern taxonomy we know today.Carl Linnaeus first created the two kingdom system, with Animalia and Vegetabilia.Ernst Haekel developed the three kindom system, adding protista and changing vegetabilia into plantae.Edouard Chatton was the the one to distinguish between the eukaryotic and prokarytic.Herbert Copeland was responsible for the fourth kingdom, the monera. This kingdom was added and included all the bacterias.Robert Whittaker was the first to propose the five kingdom system, and he split the protista into two kingdoms, protista and fungi.Carl Woese made the six kingdom system, spliting the kingdom monera into two separate kingdoms, the archaebacteria and eubacteria.In 1990, Carl Woese redrew the taxomonic tree, which included his three-domain system, Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
bacteria;archae and euba
The classification system has evolved over time, leading to changes in how organisms are organized. Monera was once a kingdom that included bacteria and archaea, but advancements in technology and genetic research revealed significant differences between the two groups. As a result, monera was divided into separate domains, Bacteria and Archaea, leading to the current classification system which includes six kingdoms.
Monera is a kingdom that contains unicellular life. It is split into the two domains of Archaea and Bacteria.
Monera used to be the kingdom for all prokaryotes. Now that prokaryotes are divided into two domains (Archaea and Bacteria), there is no more kingdom Monera. In essence, species once belonging to the kingdom Monera were divided into the two domains.
Monera
Archaea and Bacteria.
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It depends on what kingdom you are talking about. There is Five kingdoms. One is the kingdom of Monera. Two is the kingdom of Fungi. Three is the kingsom of Protoctista. Four the kingdom of Plants. Five is the kingdom of animals....which us humans belong to.
Bacteria are classified into the Kingdom Bacteria, also known as Monera. This kingdom consists of single-celled organisms with prokaryotic cells, lacking a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Bacteria are one of the three domains of life, along with Archaea and Eukarya.
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There are more than two types of organisms withing Kingdom Monera, but the two domains within Monera are Archaea and Bacteria.
During Linnaeus's time, life was divided into the kingdoms Plantae (plants) and Animalia (animals).
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