The kingdom of protists has both heterotrophs, autotrophs, and uni/multicellular organisms.
The kingdom Animalia includes only multicellular heterotrophs.
plantae
::::::::MOE AK47::::::::::::
the plantae kingdom.
Animalia.
Plantae
plants
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).
There are 29 phyla in the kingdom Animalia. Only 3 percent of organisms in this kingdom are vertebrates. they are found in one phylum, called Chordata.
Yes, Kingdom Plantae includes organisms such as land plants that have distinct characteristics not found in other kingdoms, such as multicellularity, cell walls made of cellulose, and the ability to photosynthesize using chlorophyll. These features are unique to plants and set them apart as a separate kingdom in the classification system.
Porifera, which includes sponges, do not have true germ layers like other animals. They lack specialized tissues and organs, making them the simplest multicellular organisms.
The five kingdom classification system offers a more detailed and comprehensive way to categorize organisms based on their characteristics and evolution. It includes Monera (bacteria), Protista (algae and protozoans), Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. In contrast, the two kingdom classification system only divides organisms into Plantae and Animalia based on their complexity and cellular organization.
The animal kingdom consists of only multicellular heterotrophs.
Animalia contains only multicellular organisms.
Animalia is the kingdom that consists only of complex multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
The Fungi kingdom includes multicellular heterotrophic organisms.
Kingdom Animalia is the kingdom you're looking for - it is inside the domain Eukaryota, meaning the organisms within it are eukaryotic; all organisms are multicellular; and no organism inside the kingdom can fix carbon.
The animal kingdom, which only includes the multicellular heterotrophs.
The only Kingdom to have only autotrophes would have to be the Kingdom Planae. This kingdom consists of all land plants. I hope this helped :)
The plantae kingdom refers to organisms that are multicellular, and make their own food (by photosynthesis) sources --> own notes
EUKARY DOMAIN IS THE ONLY MULTICELLULAR DOMAIN, WITH THIS COMES Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
If I am right that the kingdoms of life include only bacteria, archaea, protista, plantea, and anamalia, then protista is the only kingdom that includes autotrophes (in this case uni- or multicellular tiny organisms that process energy through photosynthesis) and heterotrophes (through ingestion and/or metabolism). Anamalia is the only kingdom that does not include any autotrophs. correct me if I am wrong (about capitalization for instance).
the more classification levels that two organisms share
Protists