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Some examples of organisms in the Archaebacteria kingdom include methanogens, extremophiles (such as thermophiles and halophiles), and some sulfate-reducing bacteria. These organisms are known for their ability to thrive in extreme environments, such as volcanic springs, deep sea vents, and hypersaline lakes.
Single-celled organisms belong to the kingdom Protista, which includes various types of eukaryotic organisms that are not plants, animals, or fungi. Some examples of single-celled organisms in this kingdom are amoebas, paramecia, and euglenas.
A: The kingdom that is single-celled is the protist kingdom. It is one of the five kingdoms of living things; plant, animal, protist, moneran, and fungi. An example of a protist is algae. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and FungiProtista and Fungi
Examples of organisms belonging to the protista kingdom include algae, protozoa, and slime molds. Algae are photosynthetic organisms found in aquatic environments, protozoa are single-celled organisms that can be parasitic or free-living, and slime molds are fungus-like organisms that can move and behave like animals at some stages in their life cycle.
some have cell walls, mostly algae
Most organisms in the kingdom Protista are unicellular, such as protozoans and algae. However, some protists can form colonies, like certain types of algae or amoebas. This diversity in form allows protists to adapt to different environments and lifestyles.
Protista is the kingdom that is made up of unicellular eukaryotes. These organisms are diverse and can be either plant-like, animal-like, or fungus-like. Protists include organisms such as amoebas, paramecia, and algae.
There is no single kingdom that is unicellular. All prokaryotes (organisms with no cell nucleus) are unicellular, and they belong to two domains, bacteria and archaea. Eukaryotes, or organisms with a cell nucleus, are divided into four kingdoms, plants, fungi, animals, and protists (although recently scientists began to reclassify protists into multiple separate kingdoms). In each of the fungi and protist kingdoms, there are a variety of members that are unicellular, and also some members that are multicellular. Animals and plants are always multicellular (except possibly one animal group called Myxozoa).
Bacteria and viruses are examples of prokaryotic organisms.
The kingdom Protista is basically "catch-all" type of category for scientists, meaning any eukaryotic organism that can not be classified as either a fungus, animal, or plant is generally classified as a protist, making the kingdom Protista extremely diverse.Algae
it is vascular plants and nonn vascular plants
Fungi can be larger than protists because fungi are multicellular organisms, while some protists are single-celled organisms. Fungi can form complex structures like mushrooms and molds, which can be larger than individual protist cells.