Monera /məˈnɪ(ə)rə/ muh-NIRR-uh is a now-obsolete taxonomic group in biological classification originally understood as one of five biological kingdoms. The Monera kingdom included most organisms with a prokaryotic cell organization (that is, no nucleus). For this reason, the kingdom was sometimes called Prokaryota or Prokaryotae.
They are eukaryotes, not prokaryotes. Only backeria can be prokaryotes.
hey are only in eukaryotes. They are never in prokaryotes.
Bacteria and Archaea
70s ribosomes are in prokaryotes.80s ribosomes are found only in eukaryotes.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, prokaryotes only have a nucleoid (region where the cell's DNA is located, not enclosed by a membrane). But that's not the only difference. Prokaryotes also lack almost all the other organelles that eukaryotes have. Prokaryotes only have the nucleoid and free ribosomes in their internal structure.
No,they do not have chloroplasts.They are only in eukariyotes.
The group of organisms that includes all prokaryotes is the domain Bacteria and Archaea. These organisms lack a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles found in eukaryotic cells.
Eukaryites have nuclei while prokaryotes do not.
The only living prokaryotes are bacteria.
The prokaryotes usually have only one chromosome, and it bears little morphological resemblance to eukaryotic chromosomes.
yes prokaryotes have prokaryotes
They are microorganisms.