Fungi
Originally, fungi were grouped with plants.
In classifying organisms, orders are grouped together into classes. Classes are then grouped together into phyla (or divisions for plants), which are further grouped into kingdoms.
animals, plants, and protists
Carolus Linnaeus defined two main kingdoms in his classification studies of living things. For plants he chose Vegetabilia, and for animals he chose Animalia.
The original first two kingdoms were animals and plants.
Aristotle was the Greek philosopher who developed one of the first classification systems, where he grouped organisms into animals and plants based on their differentiating characteristics. This system laid the foundation for future advancements in biological classification.
The classification level below domain in plants is kingdom. Plants are classified in the domain Eukarya, which is further divided into different kingdoms, with the Plantae kingdom consisting of all plants.
animals, plants, and protists
Supergroups are a level above kingdom in terms of taxonomic classification. Plants, animals and fungi are all kingdoms in taxonomy.
Animals or plants that are grouped together in the same class - usually exhibit common traits. This helps to classify new discoveries so they're grouped with similar organisms.
The five main kingdoms of classification are Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi (fungi), Protista (protists), and Monera (bacteria). These kingdoms help organize living organisms based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
The three kingdoms were Animalia for animals, Plantae for plants, and Protista for protists. This classification system was proposed by Ernst Haeckel in the late 19th century to categorize all living organisms into broad groups based on their characteristics.