They are missing a vacuole.
Bacteria do not have any organelles.
The Kingdom Monera was for a time one of the five kingdoms into which scientists organized all life-forms. It consisted of bacteria that did not have a cell nucleus. they are also called Prokaryotes. This classification is no longer used.
Ribosomes are found in all cells, including bacteria. Some people reserve the word "organelle" for subcellular structures that have a membrane around them, in which case bacteria contain no organelles at all. Other people are happy to call ribosomes organelles, in which case that is your answer.
Most of them don't but there are exceptions to the case whereby the single celled organisms photosynthesize instead of absorb nutrients through the cell wall. However in most general cases, monera do not have chloroplasts or other organelles including a nucleus.
I think you mean the Ribosomes.
Bacteria do not have any organelles.
The Kingdom Monera was for a time one of the five kingdoms into which scientists organized all life-forms. It consisted of bacteria that did not have a cell nucleus. they are also called Prokaryotes. This classification is no longer used.
Yes, Monerans are prokaryotes.
Cell. Becuase CELLS are the basic unit of structure and function of all living things.
They lack a nucleus.
Ribosomes are found in all cells, including bacteria. Some people reserve the word "organelle" for subcellular structures that have a membrane around them, in which case bacteria contain no organelles at all. Other people are happy to call ribosomes organelles, in which case that is your answer.
Monerans, or bacteria, live everywhere. They are in the soil, in water, in the air, and in and on us. Human, and other, life without them would be impossible. They, along with Protists and Fungi, breakdown and return organic compounds back into all food webs. Some Monerans are autotrophs. They use energy from sunlight to make food. Other autotrophic Monerans live at the ocean bottom and use the energy contained in minerals emitted from steam vents to make food. Autotrophic bacteria form the base for the life that exists in those deep depths. Heterotrophic bacteria in our intestines breakdown food for us. We could not digest plant material without them. Some Monera require oxygen for life processes(aerobic ), and some do not require oxygen( anaerobic).
Monera is a single cell organism, although there exists a few that have multicellular stages.Please see related link below!
yes so that they can hold the parts together ?
Monera is the first Kingdom according to R.H. Whittaker's five-kingdom classification.It comprises all prokaryotic (Without a well developed nucleus or nuclear membrane bound organelles) organisms and has NO eukaryotic( With a prominent nucleus and nuclear membrane bound organelles) organisms in it.The sole members of this kingdom are bacteria. Blue- green algae also known as cyanobacteria come under this kingdom.They are all unicellular. No organism is multicellular.They reproduce by asexual means or vegetative means.Some bacteria adopt a VERY primitive mode of sexual reproduction.It has 3 main domains: Eubacteria, Cyanobacteria, Archaebacteria.
Naked DNA, which means that the DNA isn't surrounded by a nuclear membrane. They 'take over' human cells and use their organelle to carry out important functions, where as bacteria do it with all their own organelle. Antibiotics don't work against them.
Yes, Lysosomes are in all animal cells. Lysosomes remove any waste and bacteria in a cell. This organelle also recycles worn out cell parts.