Scientists believe that plants evolved directly from a freshwater green algae called charophyte. There are two different types of charophytes, coleochaetales and charales, which strongly resemble earliest land plants.
green algea
from green algea that went into land plants which now represents present day chloroplast
animals, plants, protists
The Kingdom Protista was thought to be evolved 1.5 billion years ago through endosymbiosis. The Kingdom Protista contains life-forms similar to those that gave rise to the three kingdoms of multicellular organisms-fungi, plants, and animals.
Yes
No. Cellulose is a substance, not a living thing. Plants evolved from algae that developed cell walls made of cellulose.
They believed plants evolved from prehistoric times.
Green algae
green algea
Scientists thing protists evolved from archaea, which are simply single celled organisms.
from green algea that went into land plants which now represents present day chloroplast
animals, plants, and protists
Scientists believe that animals evolved from single-celled organisms in the oceans around 600 million years ago, making them the first to appear. Plants, on the other hand, evolved from ancient algae and appeared on land around 450 million years ago.
animals, plants, protists
"Plants" is the scientific word for plants. If you want to know the Kingdom to which plants belong, that is Plantae. Flora.
Many scientists believe that ancient green algae evolved into land plants. The chloroplasts present in green algae are the same as those of land plants. In addition, green algae have cell walls of similar composition to land plants; both store food, such as starch, in the same manner. Most green algae live in freshwater habitats with highly variable conditions. The ongoing changes in their environment have made them highly adaptable.what-evidence-has-led-scientists-to-believe-land-plants-evolved-from-green-algae
Fungi were once grouped with the kingdom plantae, whoever scientists decided that Fungi were too fundamentally different from plants because they lacked chloroplast and chlorophyll, they had no stems or roots, and Fungi are decomposers not producers. so scientists gave Fungi their own kingdom.