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The bacterium Salmonella, is in the protoctista kingdom! ! x
Main kingdom is plantae. Also some in protista
Plantae is the kingdom. But protists also have them
The scheme most often used currently divides all living organisms into fivekingdoms: Monera (bacteria), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. This coexisted with a scheme dividing life into two main divisions: the Prokaryotae (bacteria, etc.) and the Eukaryotae (animals, plants, fungi, and protists).
The five main classifications of Protista Kingdom are:Chromalveolata - Presence of cellulose and chloroplasts.Excavata - Organisms that lack classical mitochondria.Rhizaria- Mostly consists of amoeboid organisms.Archaeplastida- Comprises of red, green algae.Unikonta- Organisms with a single flagellum or no flagellum at all.
Not entirely sure what you mean BUT... There are such sub-kingdoms as Archaebacteria and Eubacteria which are found the main Kingdom of Monera. To be in the Monera Kingdom a cell must not have a nucleus, the genetics are scattered loose within the whole cell. To be in the Protista Kingdom, a cell usually will have cilia which are little 'hairs' which help the cell feed. Protista cells have nucleus' though. Ciaran Dunsdon
Algae-plant like Fungi- slime mole and water mold Protozoa-1st animal like .... Classified by means of locomotion!
The kingdoms eubacteria and kingdom archaebacteria are bacteria kingdoms, which are unicellular.
The Kingdom Protista comprises eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into other major kingdoms like plants, animals, or fungi. This kingdom includes a diverse group of organisms such as algae, protozoa, and slime molds. Members of the Kingdom Protista can be unicellular, colonial, or multicellular.
There are three main body "parts": the head, the thorax and the abdomen.
One is rhodophyta, which surprisingly includes kelps. Another is chlorophyta, which is made of colonies of organisms. This is the closest you could get to two phylums of multicellular organisms in kingdom Protista.