i can't answer it
all organisms in the deuteromycota phylum are different which is why this phylum is known as the imperfect fungi group. the only characteristic that the fungi in the phylum have in common is they all have cell walls.
They all are living and they help us
A system that groups organisms by ancestry
A scientific nomenclature for a plant or animal is universally accepted in the scientific community, and relates to that plant or animal only (though may be changed if studies reveal new information). Several common names can be used for the same plant or animal depending on where in the World.
The estimated number of animals on our planet falls somewhere in the vast range of 10-30 million species. The scientists are not sure how many exactly because they have no way of counting really how many there are.
Woodlice and fungi have very little in common, beyond both being living organisms. Woodlice are part of the Animal Kingdom while fungi make up the Fungal Kingdom.
In the scientific classification system, the kingdom Animalia is one of five kingdoms. All organisms in this kingdom are: multicellular, mobile and heterotrophic.
I do not know why a common octopus is an animal kingdom
They are non-flowering plants. They produces spores,
A kingdom is a taxonomic rank that places together organisms that have common fundamental features. Kingdom Plantae reproduce by spores or seeds.
all organisms in the deuteromycota phylum are different which is why this phylum is known as the imperfect fungi group. the only characteristic that the fungi in the phylum have in common is they all have cell walls.
They all are living and they help us
A derived character is a trait that is shared by organisms with a recent common ancestor. It is also called as shared character.
The kingdom Protista (also known as Protoctista) includes organisms such as Protozoa, Algae and Fungus.
Dolphins and spiders are both members of the animal kingdom. Other than that they have little on common.
yes they are because they share a common trait....
Carolus Linnaeus was the Swedish botanist who created a classification method for organisms. The number of organisms at each level of classification increases as one progresses from species to kingdom.