I'm hoping you meant Protista. Kingdom protista is actually very diverse. They are a monophyletic group, meaning they are diverse. They are primarily unicellular, and pretty much tiny, usually microscopic. Some can perform photosynthesis, while are heterotrophs, having to eat like an animal. Hope that helps!
Protoctista are eukaryotic, meaning they have a true nucleus. Monera are prokaryotic, meaning they have no nucleus.
The kingdom Protista (also known as Protoctista) includes organisms such as Protozoa, Algae and Fungus.
Algea is classified into "Protista"(Protoctista) kingdom.
Kingdom Protoctista is difficult to classify because it consists of diverse organisms with unique characteristics that don't fit neatly into other kingdoms. They are grouped based on mostly on their mode of nutrition, locomotion, and reproduction. For example, Protozoa: Unicellular organisms that primarily obtain nutrients through phagocytosis, such as Amoeba. Algae: Photosynthetic protists that can be unicellular or multicellular, like Chlamydomonas. Slime molds: Protists that exhibit characteristics of both fungi and amoebas, such as Physarum polycephalum.
Protoctista Kingdom
The term Protoctista is an outdated kingdom classification that encompassed various eukaryotic organisms that didn't fit neatly into other kingdoms such as animals, plants, or fungi. It has since been replaced by more specific and accurate classifications based on genetic and evolutionary relationships.
poopongilica is the scientific name for kingdom protista
The kingdom Protoctista.
Protoctista is an outdated biological kingdom that encompassed a wide variety of eukaryotic organisms that did not fit into the plant, animal, or fungi kingdoms. It is no longer considered a valid taxonomic group due to advancements in molecular biology and the understanding of phylogenetic relationships among eukaryotes.
The bacterium Salmonella, is in the protoctista kingdom! ! x
It depends on what kingdom you are talking about. There is Five kingdoms. One is the kingdom of Monera. Two is the kingdom of Fungi. Three is the kingsom of Protoctista. Four the kingdom of Plants. Five is the kingdom of animals....which us humans belong to.
The term Protista was originally used to describe a diverse group of microscopic organisms that didn't fit into the plant, animal, or fungi kingdoms. As our understanding of these organisms evolved, the term Protista was replaced with Protoctista to emphasize their complex structure and evolutionary significance. This change reflected a recognition of the unique characteristics and importance of these organisms in the tree of life.