No they are not the same
Plants and green algae both have the same types of organelles. This is because they both are able to create their own food.
Algae are protists because they have some of the same organelles. They also are actually called plant like protists. They are still in the protists kingdom though. Protists are microscopic. But, algae is not microscopic. It is confusing but algae is in the Protists Kingdom. Algae also has call walls.
Protists in the supergroup Archaeplastida are in the same eukaryotic supergroup as land plants. This supergroup includes red algae, green algae, and land plants, which all share a common ancestor that underwent primary endosymbiosis with a cyanobacterium.
The basis for a new plant kingdom is the remarkable morphological and molecular similarities between green algae and traditional plants.-Viridiplantae would include these green photosynthetic plant like protists in the same category as traditional plants.
Algae and protozoa are placed in the same kingdom, Protista, because they are both unicellular eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the plant, animal, or fungi kingdoms. They share certain characteristics such as being aquatic, photosynthetic (in the case of algae), and lacking specialized tissues.
No, plants and birds are not from the same kingdom. Plants belong to the kingdom Plantae, while birds belong to the kingdom Animalia. They are also not from the same species, as species are a more specific classification within a kingdom, and plants and birds have very different characteristics and biology.
Marine algae are simple, photosynthetic organisms that lack true roots, stems, and leaves, such as seaweed. Marine plants are more complex, multicellular organisms with roots, stems, and leaves, such as seagrasses. While both contribute to marine ecosystems, marine algae are typically found in intertidal and subtidal zones, while marine plants are found in shallow coastal waters.
Nothing, really. Kingdom Protista is what's known as a wastebasket taxon; the only thing its members have in common is that they don't fit neatly into any other group.
Yes, green algae do not have stomata. Stomata are specialized pores found in the leaves of vascular plants that are used for gas exchange. Green algae, being simple aquatic organisms, do not have the same structures found in vascular plants.
Fungi is part of the Plant Kingdom.
There is strong molecular and morphological evidence supporting the theory that land plants evolved from green algae. Both groups share similarities in their cell walls, chloroplast structure, and photosynthetic pigments. Additionally, genetic studies have shown a close evolutionary relationship between land plants and certain groups of green algae.