eubacteria
Archaebacteria and Eubacteria are the two prokaryotic kingdoms in the current 6-kingdom system.
The two kingdoms of prokaryotes are Bacteria and Archaea. Bacteria are more common and have cell walls made of peptidoglycan, while Archaea are less common and have cell walls made of different substances. Both types of prokaryotes lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
Scotland & England
the 3 domains are bacteria, Archae, eukaryota then those are split up into the 6 kingdoms which is eubacteria,archae bacteria,protista,fungi,plantae,animalia.
Bacteria
No. Plants and protists each belong to, and make up, two different taxonomic kingdoms: Plantae and Protista.
animalia
Bacteria are prokaryotes, viruses are not classified within the six kingdoms of life, and so are neither prokaryotes nor eukaryotes.
That should be "What Kingdom are most bacteria a part of". Bacteria isn't really divided into Kingdoms, bacteria is considered a domain (which is higher than a Kingdom-we and plants, animals, fungus and amoeba are of the domain Eukaryotes) and phylla. Which phylla a particular bacterium belongs depends on whether they have an outer membrane, high or low guanine-cytosine content (substances which can also be found in DNA), whether they live in watery conditions, in soil, on the skins of animals and so on._____ALL bacteria belong to the kingdom bacteria, according to the 6 kingdom classification system. The six kingdoms are:Animalia, Plantae, Fungi,Protista, Archaea, BacteriaAll bacteria belong to the kingdom bacteria.
animallike protist, plantlike protist, and fungilike prostist make up the kingdom Protista.
England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
bacteria