Autotrophic organisms belong to the kingdom plantae.
In the six Kingdom taxonomy -
Protozoans.
The kingdom Animalia contains non-autotrophs.
The basic unit of life is called
Plantae
Autotrophic archaebacteria, in the biological classification system, are members of the class halobacteria. Halobacteria live in salt water. Some species of halobacteria are: Halobacterium cutirubrum > Halobacterium salinarumHalobacterium denitrificans > Haloferax denitrificansHalobacterium distributum > Halorubrum distributumHalobacterium halobium > Halobacterium salinarumHeterotrophic archaebacteria are members of the class Methanobacteria. As their name suggests, these species metabolize methane gas to create energy. An example of this species is methanobacterium aarhusense.
some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic some are autotrophic, some are heterotrophic
The kingdom Animalia contains non-autotrophs.
The group that contains the largest number of species is species.
it is the planta kingdom actually but anyway it is autotrophic mostly but i am not sure about the flytrap plants
I think you are quite confused; A kingdom contains many thousands of species, and each species has its own name.
species
hetaratrophic
The Kingdom Eubacteria meets these criteria.
Domain contains the fewest number of categories, with only three domains recognized in biological classification: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Metaphyta or Plantae kingdom.
A kingdom is a taxonomic rank in biological classification, typically comprising a large group of organisms that share certain fundamental characteristics. It is one of the broadest levels of classification that helps organize and group similar organisms together based on their shared evolutionary history and characteristics.
The basic unit of life is called
The taxa that contains the smallest number of species is Genus. The levels of classification from largest to smallest is Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species.