Unicellular organisms with no nucleus are called prokaryotes; they do not have a kingdom classification, but have two domains: Archaea and Bacteria.
Probably Protista, because there are evidences that suggests they were the first eukaryotes to be developed.
The kingdom of life consisting of prokaryotic organisms is called Monera. These organisms lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles in their cells. Examples include bacteria and archaea.
The kingdom Monera consists of unicellular organisms.
The simplest kingdom out of the five kingdoms is the Monera kingdom, which consists of single-celled organisms like bacteria. They lack a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles found in more complex organisms.
It includes mostly unicellular organisms that do not fit into the other kingdoms.
The kingdom Protista does not have a nucleus. It includes organisms like bacteria, which are prokaryotic and lack a membrane-bound nucleus in their cells.
Animalia is the kingdom that consists only of complex multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
There is no such thing as a bacterium with a nucleus. Single-celled organisms with a nucleus are in the kingdom protista.
No, flowers are not prokaryotes; they are part of the plant kingdom, which consists of eukaryotic organisms. Eukaryotes have complex cells with a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, unlike prokaryotes, which are simpler and lack a nucleus. Flowers are the reproductive structures of flowering plants (angiosperms), which are eukaryotic organisms.
A kingdom of one-celled organisms without a nucleus is known as Kingdom Monera or Prokaryotae. These organisms are called prokaryotes and include bacteria and blue-green algae. They lack a membrane-bound nucleus and have a simpler cell structure compared to eukaryotic organisms.
The kingdoms eubacteria and kingdom archaebacteria are bacteria kingdoms, which are unicellular.
The animal kingdom that lacks a nucleus is the kingdom Monera, which includes bacteria. Bacteria are prokaryotic organisms, meaning they do not have a membrane-bound nucleus like eukaryotic organisms.