A plant cell has chloroplasts while an animal cell doesn't. A plant cell also has a cell wall and a cell membrane, while an animal cell just has a cell membrane.
One characteristic used to place organisms into kingdoms is their ability to make organic molecules through photosynthesis.
fungi and protists
The five main kingdoms in nature are: Animalia (organisms with complex cells and tissues), Plantae (organisms that photosynthesize), Fungi (organisms that absorb nutrients), Protista (mostly single-celled organisms), and Monera (prokaryotic organisms).
Taxonomy separates organisms into the Kingdoms Bacteria, Archaea, and Eucarya, which were established in 1990 by a man named Woese. The father of modern taxonomy, Carl Linnaeaus, originally created only two Kingdoms, Plantae and Animalia. See the Related Link for more details.
Unicellular organisms are organisms that have one cell. They are divided into two quite different types, from different classification kingdoms
Organisms from all kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Prokaryotae) can use cellular respiration to generate ATP. This process occurs in the mitochondria of eukaryotic cells and in the cytoplasm of prokaryotic cells.
The domain that holds the most kingdoms is Eukarya, which includes kingdoms such as Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, and Protista. A major characteristic of Eukarya is the presence of membrane-bound organelles, including a defined nucleus, which distinguishes them from prokaryotic domains (Bacteria and Archaea) that lack these structures. This complexity allows for diverse cellular functions and specialization in eukaryotic organisms.
The six kingdoms are Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi, Protista (protists), Archaea, and Bacteria. Organisms are classified into these kingdoms based on their cellular organization, mode of nutrition, and other characteristics.
absence of a cellular nucleus
there are five criteria for classification of organisms into kingdoms. they are, 1.cell type (Prokaryote/eukaryote) 2.cell wall (cellulosic/noncellulosic/present/notpresent) 3.nuclear membrane(present/absent) 4.body organisation(cellular/multicellular/tissue/organ/organ system) 5.mode of nutrition(autotrophic/heterotrophic)
Cellular structure and mode of nutrition are two of the most important characteristics used to classify organisms into kingdoms. Cellular structure refers to whether an organism is composed of prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells, while mode of nutrition classifies organisms based on how they obtain and process nutrients.
The five kingdoms of life are Monera (single-celled prokaryotes), Protista (eukaryotic microorganisms), Fungi (multicellular organisms that absorb nutrients), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular organisms that ingest food). These kingdoms categorize organisms based on their cellular structure, mode of nutrition, and complexity of organization.