Archibacteria, also known as Archaea, is a type of bacteria whose structure lacks a cell nucleus. This type of bacteria is also missing any type of organelles within their cell walls.
Archaea (archibacteria), Bacteria, Eucaryota (Eucariotes). The latter include plants, animals, fungi, and protists.Archaea (archibacteria), Bacteria, Eucaryota (Eucariotes). The latter include plants, animals, fungi, and protists.Archaea (archibacteria), Bacteria, Eucaryota (Eucariotes). The latter include plants, animals, fungi, and protists.Archaea (archibacteria), Bacteria, Eucaryota (Eucariotes). The latter include plants, animals, fungi, and protists.
extremophile archibacteria
A structure with similar shape but a different use
Vestigial StructureA vestigial structure is a structure that appears to no longer have a use in the body.
Vestigial StructureA vestigial structure is a structure that appears to no longer have a use in the body.
Vestigial StructureA vestigial structure is a structure that appears to no longer have a use in the body.
Vestigial StructureA vestigial structure is a structure that appears to no longer have a use in the body.
I guess the "sixth kingdom" would refer to archibacteria. The reason these are often placed into a separate kingdom is because they have considerable differences from the living beings in any of the other kingdoms.
a structure with similar shape but different use. ( APEX )
If you use balls to explain the structure of a molecule you have made a model.
Most businesses use a functional organizational structure.
functional structure