The four Kingdoms recognized by Herbert Copeland in 1938 are: Animalia, Plantae, Protista, and Monera.
The six Kingdom system lists the Kingdoms as: Animalia, Fungi, Plantae, Protista, Archae, and Bacteria.
well in the animal kingdom there is a lot of different species and classes so the species and classes in the kingdom have different enviroments:)
Porifera is a phylum, not a kingdom, but I assume you mean the phylum in the kingdom Animalia. According to wikipedia, there are about 5000 different species in Porifera.
What are the 5 different divisions of the Fungi Kingdom?Sac FungiClub FungiImperfect FungiZygote FungiLichens
No, they are not. Fungi are their own kingdom.
To determine if species X and Y belong to different classes within the same kingdom, it's essential to examine their taxonomic classifications. If they are classified under the same kingdom but have different classes, then they indeed belong to different classes within that kingdom. For example, if species X is a mammal (class Mammalia) and species Y is a bird (class Aves), they belong to the same kingdom (Animalia) but different classes.
No, the are in different kingdom: Fish
the have different cellulars
kingdom
Members of the kingdom Fungi are Heterotrophs and the Members of the kingdom Plantae are Photosynthetic Autotrophs.
Kingdom Hearts (original) (English) Kingdom Hearts Final Mix (Japanese/English)
No, not every living thing is in the kingdom Animalia. The kingdom Animalia includes multicellular, eukaryotic organisms that are heterotrophic and lack cell walls. Organisms in other kingdoms may have different characteristics, such as plants in the kingdom Plantae which are autotrophic and have cell walls.
animals are mobile and don't have cell walls