The kingdom of eubacteria.
Cyanobacteria are part of the Kingdom Bacteria. They are ancient photosynthetic bacteria that played a significant role in the oxygenation of Earth's atmosphere and are sometimes referred to as blue-green algae due to their plant-like appearance.
banana
Plantea
aids
The Animals Kingdom
The United Kingdom is a group of country's containing England, Scotland, Whales and Northen Irland.
I think it's animalia.
A kingdom containing the leftovers refers to the Fungi kingdom, which includes organisms like mushrooms, molds, and yeasts. These organisms play a crucial role in decomposing organic matter, breaking down dead plants and animals, and recycling nutrients back into the ecosystem. By doing so, they help maintain the balance of ecosystems and contribute to soil health. Fungi are essential for nutrient cycling and are often found thriving on decaying organic material.
A kingdom containing organisms that eat other organisms is the Kingdom Animalia. Animals are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain their energy by consuming other living organisms. They can be carnivores, herbivores, omnivores, or detritivores, depending on their feeding habits.
The kingdom Plantae falls under the domain Eukaryota.
Lichens are not classified under a kingdom in the traditional sense like plants or animals. Instead, they are a symbiotic combination of a fungus and an alga or cyanobacterium, forming a unique organism with characteristics of both partners. This symbiotic relationship can be found in various environments, from forests to deserts.
In 1905, the Russian biologist C. Mereschkowsky postulated that plastids (e.g., chloroplasts) are the evolutionary descendants of endosymbiotic cyanobacteria-like organisms. In 1927, I. Wallin explicitly postulated that mitochondria likewise evolved from once free-living bacteria. Here, we summarize the history of these endosymbiotic concepts to their modern-day derivative, the "serial endosymbiosis theory", which collectively expound on the origin of eukaryotic cell organelles (plastids, mitochondria) and subsequent endosymbiotic events. ...So either the answer is Plantae or maybe animalia? my bet is Plantae. *edit - Its Plantae :)