there are five criteria for classification of organisms into kingdoms.
they are, 1.cell type (Prokaryote/eukaryote)
2.cell wall (cellulosic/noncellulosic/present/notpresent)
3.nuclear membrane(present/absent)
4.body organisation(cellular/multicellular/tissue/organ/organ system)
5.mode of nutrition(autotrophic/heterotrophic)
One characteristic used to place organisms into kingdoms is their ability to make organic molecules through photosynthesis.
The characteristic used to place organisms into kingdoms is their cell type. Organisms are classified based on whether they are prokaryotic (lacking a nucleus) or eukaryotic (having a nucleus). This fundamental difference helps separate organisms into broad categories at a higher taxonomic level.
Being trustworthy
bacteria, archaea, and eukarya
The more classification levels two organisms share, the more closely related they are in terms of evolutionary history. Organisms that share many classification levels are likely to be more similar in terms of genetics, anatomy, and behavior.
kingdoms kingdoms are domains, phenetics classifies organisms.
.All of the following are used to classify organisms into domains and kingdoms EXCEPT ____.Color of body
The three characteristics used to place organisms into domains and kingdoms are cell type (prokaryotic or eukaryotic), cell structure (unicellular or multicellular), and nutritional mode (autotrophic or heterotrophic). These characteristics help classify and categorize living organisms based on their fundamental biological traits.
Animal and Plants
they use genus and dichotomous keys
Kingdoms and domains are used to classify living things. There are 3 domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryote. Within the domains, living things are sorted into Kingdoms. There are currently 5 Kingdoms protista, bacteria, archaea, plants, animals, and fungi. Previously, only the 5 kingdom system existed. Later however, the domains were added.
Taxonomy separates organisms into the Kingdoms Bacteria, Archaea, and Eucarya, which were established in 1990 by a man named Woese. The father of modern taxonomy, Carl Linnaeaus, originally created only two Kingdoms, Plantae and Animalia. See the Related Link for more details.