Cynobacteria are in photosynthetic bacteria.So they are in same kingdom
They both belong in the Protista kingdomPROTISTAMOSTLY UNICELLULAREUKARYOTICSOME COLONIALAMEBAPARAMECIUMEUGLENAALGAE
Eubacteria have prokaryotic cells. Eubacteria IS Kingdom Bacteria! The Eu- was there to distinguish it from Archaebacteria when Archaebacteria were in the same kingdom as Eubacteria and not in its own kingdom of Archae, as they are now. (The old kingdom that contained both Eubacteria and Archaebacteria was called Kingdom Monera)
The members of the kingdom Archaebacteria possess bacteria and eukaryote. They are single-celled organisms, prokaryotes, the same size and shape as bacteria, and possess genes and metabolic pathways.
Simply put no. Infact, Bacteria are in the kingdom Moneras and divide into two sub catagories, Eurbacteria and Archeabacteria whic hare both prokaryotic . This means they are very simple lack a nuclei, mitochondrias and chloroplasts, both reproduce with binary fission. Where are fungi is actually it's own kingdom entirely, and is eukaryotic.
There is bacteria on the surface of your skin but they are not the same as your skin cells.
They both belong in the Protista kingdomPROTISTAMOSTLY UNICELLULAREUKARYOTICSOME COLONIALAMEBAPARAMECIUMEUGLENAALGAE
Animalia is the kingdom. The domain for it is Eukarya, the domain for it also has 3 other kingdoms. Plantae, Fungi, and Protista, There are 3 domains, Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. Bacteria is the kingdom for the Domain in a way. They are kind of the same, same way for the Archeae. The Fungi in Eurkarya feeds on dead or decayed materials. Bacteria causes germs to get you sick, those are just a couple of examples on what they do. Note that bacteria is party of the Bacteria domain, not the Eurkaya. Bacteria and Archaea may be called that for the domain, but they are also called the same name for their kingdom.
Archaea also are based for bacteria since bacteria is unicellular so is archaea.ALSO they both have the same organisims.
No. They in separate kingdoms and separate domains.
Eubacteria have prokaryotic cells. Eubacteria IS Kingdom Bacteria! The Eu- was there to distinguish it from Archaebacteria when Archaebacteria were in the same kingdom as Eubacteria and not in its own kingdom of Archae, as they are now. (The old kingdom that contained both Eubacteria and Archaebacteria was called Kingdom Monera)
The members of the kingdom Archaebacteria possess bacteria and eukaryote. They are single-celled organisms, prokaryotes, the same size and shape as bacteria, and possess genes and metabolic pathways.
Nothing, really. Kingdom Protista is what's known as a wastebasket taxon; the only thing its members have in common is that they don't fit neatly into any other group.
A population is any group of living species, from any kingdom, from bacteria to animals, that live in the same area.
In the same way that "geese" and "goose" are the same. Bacteria is the plural form of bacterium.
Simply put no. Infact, Bacteria are in the kingdom Moneras and divide into two sub catagories, Eurbacteria and Archeabacteria whic hare both prokaryotic . This means they are very simple lack a nuclei, mitochondrias and chloroplasts, both reproduce with binary fission. Where are fungi is actually it's own kingdom entirely, and is eukaryotic.
they are both the same
Some scientists use a six-kingdom system to include a separate kingdom for archaebacteria, which are prokaryotic organisms with distinct genetic and biochemical characteristics different from bacteria. This system provides a more accurate representation of evolutionary relationships among different organisms compared to the five-kingdom system, which lumps archaebacteria with bacteria in the same kingdom.