Archaea are unicellular prokaryote, an organism of the kingdom Monera (or Prokaryotae), comprising the bacteria and cyanobacteria, characterized by the absence of a distinct, membrane-bound nucleus or membrane-bound organelles, and by DNA that is not organized into chromosomes. Also called moneran.
Monera -Gotta help my fellow Plato users! :D
In the five kingdom classification scheme archaea are placed in their own kingdom called archaea. This is a kingdom of single celled organisms.
Euryarchaeota is a kingdom of Archaea. Its domain is Archaea.
Prokaryotes are placed in the kingdom Monera, which includes bacteria and archaea. These organisms lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, distinguishing them from eukaryotes. However, the classification of prokaryotes has evolved, and some taxonomists now recognize bacteria and archaea as separate domains rather than grouping them together in one kingdom.
There in no archaea kingdom. There is such a thing called archeabacteria, but no archeabacteria
kingdom prokaryotae
Archaea are single-celled microorganisms that are distinct from animals. They are considered one of the three domains of life, along with Bacteria and Eukarya. So, animals are not classified within the archaea kingdom.
Bacteria archaea
Archaea.
Archaeoglobus belongs to the kingdom Archaea. It is a type of extremophile archaea that thrives in high temperature environments, such as deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
The kingdom Monera contains the archaea and bacteria.
The common name for the Archaebacteria kingdom is archaea.