Kingdoms, now.
Eubacteria and Aracheabacteria.
monera
Kingdom Monera
The only living prokaryotes consist mostly of bacteria. There are several types of bacteria that are prokaryotes. Some examples of these are E. coli, streptococcus, and Streptomyces, to name a few.
No, prokaryotes are not classified as a kingdom. Prokaryotes are a type of cellular organization found in bacteria and archaea, which are typically classified into two separate domains: Bacteria and Archaea. The traditional Five Kingdom classification system recognizes prokaryotes within the Kingdom Monera, but this system is now considered outdated in modern taxonomy.
..No.
The kingdom that has all prokaryotes that may be found in the human body is......Eubacteria or just bacteria
Archeobactetia
The kingdom that contains all prokaryotes except archaebacteria is Bacteria. Archaebacteria are a separate domain from Bacteria, so the kingdom Bacteria includes all prokaryotes that are not part of the Archaea domain.
There are 2 domains (The catagorys above Kingdom) that contain Prokaryotes. They are Bacteria and Archea. I guess Bacterial could be a kingdom. But the other 4 (Plant, animal, fingi, and protists) consist of Eukaryote cells. :)
The eukaryotes kingdom contains archaea and bacteria. The prokaryotes kingdom contains Protista, fungi, animalia and plantae
Prokaryotes that are found in environments that are extreme are classified in the Archaebacteria kingdom. The kingdom consists of single-celled microorganisms.
prokaryotes