1. Chromalveolates
2. Plantae
3. Excavates
4. Rhizaria
5. Unikonts
Animals, plants, Protists, fungi
so people will not get confused
Protists are eukaryotes that do not belong to plant, animal or fungi species. The way in which protists are related to other eukaryotes stems from the fact that among the current protists include groups whose ancestors were the reason why plants, animals and fungi exist today.
Protists are a paraphyletic group because animals, fungi, and plants are the crown groups evolved from different lineages of the protists. They aren't included in the same group as protists taxonomically. This explains why the cladists consider the protist a paraphyletic group.
Bacteria are prokaryotic while protists are eukaryotic. Bacteria DNA is not contained within a nucleus, and it is circular, whereas in eukaryotes the DNA is found in compact chromosomes. Prokaryotes (like bacteria) also lack organelles such as mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, etc. Also, prokaryotic cell walls contain peptidoglycan. Protists are divided into three groups: protozoa (animal-like protists), algae (plant-like protists), and slime moulds (fungi-like protists). They do not fit into the kingdoms animalia, plantae, or fungi, but they are eukaryotic (like the members of those kingdoms).
animal plant fungi Protists Bacteria
Animal-like protists
Protozoa and Algae
animal, plant, fungus
12
animal-like groups
Somewhat, there are three groups: Plant-like, Animal-like, and fungus-like. Protists are basically the leftovers.
BoBert took the fouled and bones and bobbed it I luv u carol
Animals, plants, Protists, fungi
New classifications of protists are attempting to present monophyletic groups based on structure, biochemistry and genetics.
New classifications of protists are attempting to present monophyletic groups based on structure, biochemistry and genetics.
animal, plant and fungus