Prokaryotes that are found in environments that are extreme are classified in the Archaebacteria kingdom. The kingdom consists of single-celled microorganisms.
p
archaebacteria
The archaebacteria kingdom is one of the six kingdoms. Organisms in this kingdom are also called Bacteria; they are unicellular and live in very extreme environments. The "common bacteria" belongs to another kingdom; the Eubacteria kingdom, bacteria in this kingdom differ from bacteria in the archaebacteria kingdom and they do not live in extreme environments.
No
The Extreme Microbe happens to belong in the Fungi kingdom
Monera used to be the kingdom for all prokaryotes. Now that prokaryotes are divided into two domains (Archaea and Bacteria), there is no more kingdom Monera. In essence, species once belonging to the kingdom Monera were divided into the two domains.
organisms in the archaea kingdom Prokaryotes
The unicellular prokaryotes in the domain Bacteria are classified in the kingdom Bacteria.
Archeabacteria lives in a kingdom made up of bacteria that live in EXTREME environments
archaea
Archaebacteria
archaebacteria
archaebacteria
The archaebacteria kingdom is one of the six kingdoms. Organisms in this kingdom are also called Bacteria; they are unicellular and live in very extreme environments. The "common bacteria" belongs to another kingdom; the Eubacteria kingdom, bacteria in this kingdom differ from bacteria in the archaebacteria kingdom and they do not live in extreme environments.
Kingdom Monera
No
Prokaryotes are cells without a nucleus, and yes they are in the same kingdom as eukaryotes.
The archaebacteria live in unusual (extreme) environments.