Bacteria, Archaea, and Protists, and some Fungi.
those plants are places in order from microscopic to big ones
The kingdom that has microscopic organisms with characteristics of plant cells is the kingdom Protista. Some protists, such as algae and diatoms, are unicellular and contain chloroplasts, which enable them to carry out photosynthesis like plant cells do.
those plants are places in order from microscopic to big ones
Fungi Fungi used to be classed as members of the Plant Kingdom but are now placed in a separate Kingdom of Life, the others being the Plant Kingdom and the Animal Kingdom.
The organism belongs to the Kingdom Protista. This kingdom includes eukaryotic organisms that are unicellular or multicellular but lack specialized tissues, such as protozoa and algae.
Animalia is the Animal Kingdom. When we classify an organism, it can be a plant, fungus or from the kingdom of animalia which includes all kinds of organisms that are not plants or fungi. Bears, fish & microscopic protozoa are all animals and fall under the kingdom of animalia.
No, phytoplankton are not part of the animal kingdom. They are actually a type of microscopic marine algae that belongs to the plant kingdom. Phytoplankton play a vital role in marine ecosystems as they are primary producers at the base of the food chain.
Archaezoa is the name of a kingdom used for biological classification. The creatures in this kingdom are microscopic protists that form symbiotic relationships with other creates, and may be found living in many animals as well as humans.
The definition for the word protozoan is "a single-celled microscopic animal of a group of phyla of the kingdom Protista, such as an amoeba, flagellate, ciliate, or sporozoan."
Protista. This kingdom was established to include eukaryotic organisms that were not plants, animals, or fungi. It served as a sort of catch-all category for organisms that did not fit neatly into the other kingdoms.
microscopic
A sentence you can use for microscopic is; " Did you see that partical? It lookes microscopic."