I'm sorry for the answer you were previously given on this question. The answer is eubacteria.
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.
There are two kingdoms of bacteria, Archaebacteria and Eubacteria.
Bacterias are in the kingdom of bacteria. They are categorized as either archaebacteria or eubacteria.
E.Coli belongs to the eubacteria kingdom. E. Coli also belongs to the bacteria domain, the proteobacteria, and the coli species.
Kingdom is a classification within the eukaryotes domain. Bacteria is a domain itself, previously called eubacteria (true bacteria). The other domain of prokaryotes is now called archaea. Previously this also was considered a kind of bacteria: archeabacteria. The third domain of living beings is the eukarya, where kingdoms plantae, fungi and animalia etc. belong.
Monera is a kingdom that contains unicellular life. It is split into the two domains of Archaea and Bacteria.
modern bacteria. Ancient bacteria refer to the kingdom Archaebacteria, which consists of prokaryotic organisms that thrive in extreme environments. Modern bacteria refer to the kingdom Eubacteria, which includes most of the common bacterial species found in various habitats.
No, archaebacteria and eubacteria are both considered types of bacteria but they are classified into separate domains in biological classification - Archaea and Bacteria, respectively. Despite the similar names, they have distinct genetic, metabolic, and structural differences that separate them into different domains.
There are two types of bacteria...Archaebacteria and Eubacteria. Archaebacteria are ancient bacteria that are in extreme environments (hot springs, etc.). Eubacteria are the newer bacteria, those that cause illness or in food production, etc.
eubacteria, cyanobacteria, and I can' t find the other one, ARCHAEBACTERIA
The former name for Eubacteria is "true bacteria" or "bacteria," while the former name for Archaebacteria is "archaebacteria" or "archaea." These terms were used prior to the reclassification of these groups into the domains Bacteria and Archaea, respectively.
Woese, in 1990, divided the prokaryotes (previously classified as the Kingdom Monera) into two groups, called Eubacteria and Archaebacteria or Archaea.