1) Eubacteria
2) Archaeabacteria
3) Protista
4) Fungi
5) Plantae
6) Animalia
There are six Kingdoms: Animalia, Archaea, Bacteria, Fungi, Plantae, and Protista.
Fungi
The problematic taxon in the six kingdom system is the classification of protists. Protists are a diverse group of organisms with varying characteristics, making it difficult to definitively assign them to a single kingdom. This has led to some debate and uncertainty in their classification within the six kingdom system.
bacteria;archae and euba
The six groups of climates in the Köppen classification system are Tropical, Dry, Mild, Continental, Polar, and Highland. Each group is further divided into subcategories based on temperature and precipitation patterns.
The six groups of climates in the k ppen classification system are A: Equatorial B: Arid C: Warm Temperature D: Snow E: Polar F: Cool Temperature
The current six-level classification system is the Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species (King Philip Came Over For Good Soup). It groups organisms based on their shared characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
eubacteria, archaebacteria, plant, animal, protist,and fungi
The kingdom Protista was divided to create the six kingdom model classification. This division was made to provide a more organized and accurate classification system for organisms that did not fit well into the existing kingdoms of animals, plants, and fungi.
Originally, fungi were grouped with plants.
The three-domain system is the most widely accepted method of classification, dividing organisms into Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya based on genetic relationships. The five kingdom and six kingdom systems are older classification systems that group organisms based on morphological and ecological characteristics, but they are not as widely used or accepted in modern taxonomy.
Carl Woese split up the prokaryotes into two kingdoms, creating a total of six kingdoms.