is the monera the name of biological kingdom
Monera is a biological kingdom comprising unicellular prokaryotic organisms like bacteria.
Monera is a biological kingdom that includes unicellular prokaryotic organisms like bacteria and blue-green algae. The main criteria for categorizing an organism within the Monera kingdom include having prokaryotic cells (lacking a true nucleus), lacking membrane-bound organelles, and being unicellular (although some species can form colonies).
Yes it is one of the five kingdoms of living organisms given by R.H.WHITTAKER which includes bacteria
No, Monera is a biological kingdom that consists of prokaryotic organisms, such as bacteria and archaea. These organisms do not have backbones or vertebral columns.
It's also called the Eubacteria Kingdom... Monera.
monera
Monera is an outdated biological classification for unicellular organisms like bacteria. In a sentence: "Scientists used to categorize bacteria and other unicellular organisms under the kingdom Monera."
In the five-kingdom scheme of biological classification, bacteria belong to the kingdom Monera. This kingdom encompasses all prokaryotic organisms, which are unicellular and lack a nucleus. Monera includes both bacteria and archaea, distinguishing them from eukaryotic organisms found in other kingdoms.
The kingdom of Monera is a taxonomic group that includes all prokaryotic organisms, such as bacteria and archaea. These organisms are characterized by their lack of a membrane-bound nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Monera is one of the five kingdoms in the traditional biological classification system.
No, it's the name of the kingdom, the bacteria is in.
Monera Kingdom
Monera, Protists, Fungi, Plants, Animals That answer is for higher grades. for example 5th grade........ it would be bacteria, protists, fungi, plants, animals. wat is monera?????????????????????????? Do they not mean like united kingdom! : )