Cyanobacteria is in the Eubacteria kingdom. It is an algae that makes its own food through photosynthesis and is blue-green in color.
Prokaryote
Bacteria Kingdom. No. Bacteria is not a kingdom. the kingdoms are monera, plantae, protista, fungi and animalia. i believe it is protista. that's something that would be really easy to look up.
Nostocales The Nostocales order contains most of the species of cyanobacteria. It includes filamentous forms, both simple or branched, and both those occurring as single strands or multiple strands within a sheath. Jon. Anderson Olympia, Washington
Cynobacteria is currently "unknown/ungrouped". It's currently identified only by Domain and Phylum.
No, not all members of the domain Bacteria are parasites. Bacteria can be classified into different categories based on their lifestyle, and while some bacteria are parasitic and rely on a host organism for survival, others are free-living and can exist independently in various environments.
"Bacteria" refers to a whole domain of organisms, which is a classificational level above kingdom. The domain is called "Bacteria", and it contains several kingdoms of bacteria. Cyanobacteria are their own kingdom, generally called "Cyanobacteria" which is part of Archaebacteria.
Cyanobacteria is the phylum of bacteria. Often called blue-green algae, it belongs to the bacteria domain and the eubacteria kingdom.
Cyanobacteria is not a major branch of domain Bacteria. Eubacteria, on the other hand, is a major branch and includes many different types of bacteria. Cyanobacteria is a specific group of photosynthetic bacteria within the domain Bacteria.
Cyanobacteria are now classified as part of the domain Bacteria. They are prokaryotic organisms that are capable of performing photosynthesis like plants and algae.
Some common phyla in the domain Bacteria include Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Cyanobacteria. Each phylum contains diverse groups of bacterial species with unique characteristics and functions.
Prokaryote
Bacteria Kingdom. No. Bacteria is not a kingdom. the kingdoms are monera, plantae, protista, fungi and animalia. i believe it is protista. that's something that would be really easy to look up.
Nostocales The Nostocales order contains most of the species of cyanobacteria. It includes filamentous forms, both simple or branched, and both those occurring as single strands or multiple strands within a sheath. Jon. Anderson Olympia, Washington
cyanobacteria
False. Not all members of the domain Bacteria are parasites. Bacteria can also include beneficial or harmless organisms that do not parasitize other organisms.
The four groups of photosynthetic bacteria are brownish nonsulfur, green sulfur, purple sulfur, and purple nonsulfur bacteria. Bacteria constitute a significant domain of what are referred to as prokaryotic microorganisms.
Cynobacteria is currently "unknown/ungrouped". It's currently identified only by Domain and Phylum.