It is controversial, some people think that we should have two groups for bacteria, those names are Archaebacteria, and Eubacteria. Archaebacteria are very old and scientists believe these were the first cells ever! They can survive in very extreme conditions such as hot springs, salty waters, and places with very high acitic levels. Eubacteria are average, new, bacteria.
The controversial part is that some people believe that we should just have 5 kingdoms, and that Archaebacteria, and Eubacteria should just be one kingdom, called Monera!
Plantae
Bacteria are a large group of micro-organisms. Otherwise known as prokaryote microorgansims. They come in all different shapes and sizes, however, they are invisible to the naked eye. They can be seen through a microscope or magnifier. Hope this helped.
I would say fungi
Fungi are arguably not alive, Bacteria are classified into the Monera kingdom
Actually now the Monera kingdom is both the eubacteria and archeabacteria.
archeabacteria are bacteira that live in extreme environments so i would say eubacteria
It depends where you are. In the United States, the bacteria would fall into 1 of 2 different kingdoms. Modern day bacteria fall into the Kingdom "Bacteria" where as their more primitive ancestors fall into the "Archaea" Kingdom. In other places of the world such as the UK they would fall into the Kingdom referred to as "Prokaryota" or "Monera"
Archeabacteria or eubacteria.
" old " bacteria or " true " nucleus bacteria.
Bacteria are classified in the kingdom of Monera, a kingdom containing unicellular organisms, which is divided into two groups - Archaea and Bacteria.
kingdom monerea
Monera
[per Answers.com] "Monera, taxonomic kingdom that comprises the prokaryotes (http://www.answers.com/topic/bacteria and http://www.answers.com/topic/cyanobacteria)."
classification of microbe kingdom or classification of plant, animal classification, or five kingdom classification of micro organisms
Amoeba sponges
First the term "kingdom" when used in terms of classification means something specific.A kingdom is a very high level classification as in the 'animal' kingdom, the 'plant' kingdom etc.As the maple is a plant it is part of the plant kingdom but is not a kingdom in its own rite.This is the scientific classification for the maple.Kingdom: Plantaeunranked: Angeospermsunranked: Eudicotsunranked: RosidsOrder: SapindalesFamily: Sapindaceae or AceraceaeSubfamily: HippocastanoideaeGenus: AcerThen comes the various Maple species.
If kingdom is an option it's kingdom. If not then the answer is phylum
[per Answers.com] "Monera, taxonomic kingdom that comprises the prokaryotes (http://www.answers.com/topic/bacteria and http://www.answers.com/topic/cyanobacteria)."
Bacterias are in the kingdom of bacteria. They are categorized as either archaebacteria or eubacteria.
classification of microbe kingdom or classification of plant, animal classification, or five kingdom classification of micro organisms
Yes, bacteria is unicellular, no, they are not plants. Bacterias are categorized into their own kingdom and is not associated with plants (although there are some bacterias that photosynthesize).
The largest level of classification in a kingdom is the phylum.
Bacterias belong to kingdom monera.They are prokaryotic organisms.
Amoeba sponges
kingdom
A kingdom is a broader classification level compared to a family. Kingdom is one of the higher taxonomic ranks in biological classification, whereas family is a lower rank that falls under kingdom.
The demerits of the Oswald Tippos classification is that it classification is only accepted for the plant kingdom. Its classification on the animal kingdom has flaws and is therefore not accepted.
In the kingdom classification; Beluga are in the Animal Kingdom.
Snakes are in the animal kingdom.