Seaweed belongs to the kindom of planti because it's of corse a PLANT and if you new the kindoms a bit better then you would know that any living thing that creats it's own food NOT BY COOKING IT IN MICROWAVE OR OVEN OR KILLING IT is a plant Duh I'm 13 and i know that
Yes you are 13 but you obviously dont know how to spell course so go back to 8th grade you little moron.
The 13 year old kid is wrong. Seaweed or Algae have no formal taxonomic significance, so basically they belong to no kingdom. However, they are divided in two kingdoms. Cynobacteria or "blue-green algae" is placed in the kingdom Eubacteria. While, red and brown algae is placed in protists.
Just because a living thing can produce its own food (Photosynthesis and Chemosynthesis) doesn't mean it is a plant. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria and Protists all produce food through photosynthesis (except Eubacteria, it produces food by chemosynthesis and photosynthesis.)
I hope this help.
Too add to the second person who is correct i just wanted to point out that Blue-green Algae is not algae even though it is named after algae. You are correct about its kingdom though.
There are commonly recognized five animal kingdoms: Kingdom Animalia, Kingdom Plantae, Kingdom Fungi, Kingdom Protista, and Kingdom Monera. The animal kingdom specifically belongs to Kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular organisms that are eukaryotic and heterotrophic.
Moneran, Protista, fungi, animalia, plantae are the five kingdoms
Plant, animal, fungal and protista are all eukaryotic kingdoms. The prokaryotic kingdoms are the eubacteria and the archaea. There are no mixed kingdoms with both prokaryotes & eukaryotes.
The 7 Levels of Classification: Kingdom, Phylom, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.The 6 Kingdoms: Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plant, and Animal.
No. Worms are part of the Animal Kingdom.
Protista
All unicellular eukaryotic organisms fall under the kingdom Protista and are thusly called "protists."
A: The kingdom that is single-celled is the protist kingdom. It is one of the five kingdoms of living things; plant, animal, protist, moneran, and fungi. An example of a protist is algae. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and FungiProtista and Fungi
Plants, Animals, Protists, Fungi, Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, and the new ChromistsThe seven kingdoms are:animaliaplantaeeumycotaprotistaprotomoneramoneramyxomycophyta
The six taxonomic kingdoms are Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Each kingdom represents a different group of organisms with specific characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
animalia protista
The kingdom that phytoplankton are apart of is called Protista. To be a protist the organism also has to be apart of the other Eukaryotic kingdoms.