Animalia, plantae, fungi, protista, eubacetria, archaebacteria
Robert Whittaker is credited with replacing the 2 kingdom taxonomic system (plants and animals) with the 5 taxonomic kingdom system. His system included the kingdoms of Monera (now split into bacteria and archaea), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
kingdoms
Aristotle subdivided his largest taxonomic categories into all his kingdoms
The largest taxonomic category in Linnaeus's system is the kingdom. This category includes all living organisms and is further divided into smaller categories like phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species.
The broadest taxonomic division is domain. There are three main domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. These domains encompass all forms of life on Earth.
A "phyla" are the primary subdivisions of a taxonomic kingdoms. It is the plural of "phylum".
taxonomic rank
If you are referring to the taxonomic Kingdom Animalia, the remaining Kingdoms have no animals. If you are referring to political kingdoms, there are a wide variety of different animals scattered across the globe.
The highest taxonomic group that includes kingdoms and all other levels of taxonomy is the domain. The three domains of life are Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya. Kingdoms belong to the domain Eukarya, while Archaea and Bacteria represent separate domains.
Integrated Taxonomic Information System was created in 1996.
Taxonomic category, often restricted to the animal kingdom. Corresponds to the category "division" in botany. The broadest taxonomic category within kingdoms. A major grouping in taxonomy.
Monera Protist Fungi Plant Animal