Monera Kingdom contains unicellular life forms. Unicellular means that they only have one cell. They have no nucleus, and are missing many organelles.
in kingdom monera all prokaryotes including eubacteria, cyanobacteria and archaebacteria. . .therefore, kingdom monera also known as kingdom protista. . .if m not mistaken. . .correct me if m wrong
It's also called the Eubacteria Kingdom... Monera.
Monera Kingdom contains unicellular life forms. Unicellular means that they only have one cell. They have no nucleus, and are missing many organelles.
The kingdom Monera included most organisms with a prokaryotic cells, (Cells without a nucleus) but since 1991, Monera has been divided into Archaea and Bacteria.
The kingdom that contains bacteria is called Monera. Blue-green algae, also known as cyanobacteria, are included in this kingdom as well.
In America, Bacteria are considered to be one of the 5 kingdoms. It is also a domain, along with Archaea and Eukaryota.
Bacteria are classified into the Kingdom Bacteria, also known as Monera. This kingdom consists of single-celled organisms with prokaryotic cells, lacking a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Bacteria are one of the three domains of life, along with Archaea and Eukarya.
No, producers can belong to different kingdoms depending on the ecosystem. In addition to plants in the plant kingdom, there are also producers like algae in the protist kingdom and certain bacteria in the monera kingdom.
The kingdom that has only one cell and lacks a nucleus is Monera. Monera includes unicellular prokaryotic organisms such as bacteria, which have a simple cell structure without a membrane-bound nucleus.
Monera used to be the Kingdom classification for bacteria
In the five kingdom system, the three kingdoms that have organisms capable of photosynthesis are some bacteria (mainly cyanobacteria) in the Kingdom Monera, algae in the Kingdom Protista, and plants in the Kingdom Plantae.
Kingdom Monera reproduces asexually through binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Some bacteria in Kingdom Monera also reproduce through methods like budding or fragmentation.