They are probably animals.
The first eukaryotes are most likely to belong to the Protista kingdom. These are mostly multicellular organisms with the earlier ones including organisms like Kneallhazia solenopsae and many more.
Animalia is the kingdom that consists only of complex multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
An organism is made up of several eukaryotic cells and eats only dead organisms. It is made up of several eukaryotic cells so it is not Kingdom Monera. It eats dead organisms, so it is probably a decomposer and apart of the Kingdom Fungi.
The five kingdom classification system groups organisms into five kingdoms based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. These kingdoms are: Monera (bacteria), Protista (unicellular eukaryotes), Fungi (multicellular decomposers), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular heterotrophs).
Probably Protista, because there are evidences that suggests they were the first eukaryotes to be developed.
Kingdon Fungi and Kingdom Plantae include multicellular organisms as well as Kindgom Anamilia; all eukaryotes.
the more classification levels that two organisms share
The first eukaryotes are most likely to belong to the Protista kingdom. These are mostly multicellular organisms with the earlier ones including organisms like Kneallhazia solenopsae and many more.
No, kingdoms are broad classifications of organisms based on shared characteristics. Eukaryotes can be unicellular or multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists, while multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
Multicellular eukaryotes can belong to either Animalia, Plantae, or Fungi.
protists
Animalia is the kingdom that consists only of complex multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
An organism is made up of several eukaryotic cells and eats only dead organisms. It is made up of several eukaryotic cells so it is not Kingdom Monera. It eats dead organisms, so it is probably a decomposer and apart of the Kingdom Fungi.
Organisms in the kingdom Protista are primarily unicellular or simple multicellular eukaryotes, such as algae and protozoa. The kingdom Plantae consists of multicellular, photosynthetic organisms, including flowering plants, ferns, and mosses. Fungi are characterized by their heterotrophic nutrition, primarily decomposing organic material, with examples like mushrooms and yeast. The kingdom Animalia includes multicellular, motile organisms that are also heterotrophic, ranging from sponges to mammals.
Animalia contains only multicellular organisms.
The five kingdoms in biodiversity are Animal, Plant, Fungi, Protist, and Monera. The Animal kingdom includes multicellular organisms with specialized cells, while Plant kingdom comprises multicellular photosynthetic organisms. Fungi are multicellular eukaryotes that obtain nutrients by decomposing organic matter. Protists are a diverse group of mostly unicellular eukaryotes, and Monera consists of unicellular prokaryotes like bacteria.
The kingdom of protists has both heterotrophs, autotrophs, and uni/multicellular organisms.