Kingdom Monera is a very outdated term. It was used mostly in the mid-20th century as part of the 5 kingdom classification system of taxonomy. This kingdom included all single-celled organisms lacking a nucleus. In the late 1970's Carl Woese devised a 6 kingdom system that split the Kingdom Monera into the Eubacteria and Archaebacteria kingdoms. In 1990, he proposed a 3-domain system which changed the Eubacteria and Archaebacteria kingdoms into the Bacteria and Archea domains and combined the former Plantae, Anamalia, Protista, and Fungi Kingdoms into a third, the Eukarya. Therefore, the species under kingdom Monera would include all species in either the Archea or Bacteria domains today.
The final problem in answering your question is one of logistics. There are millions of bacterial and archael species documented, with new ones being discovered every day. To even attempt to list them all would an effort in futility. If you're looking for more information on some of the species, you could try searching for Escherichia coli, one of the best characterized bacteria. From there, you can find information on similar organisms and branch your knowledge outwards.
strep throat, scarlet fever, meningitis, tuberculosis, pneumonia, syphilis, Lyme's disease and a variety of many other illnesses. Other bacterial illnesses that can be spread by spoiled or infected food and uncleanliness include Salmonella
that was ease for a eigth grader
The economic importance of the Kingdom Monera is it used for soil fertility. The Kingdom Monera is bacteria. It is also used in foods such as vinegar, soy sauce, and cheese.
plantAlgae and some protozoans in kingdom protista are photosynthetic. Also some bacteria in kingdom monera are photosynthetic
Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and Plantae
The Monera kingdom hasn't been used since Whittaker's 5 kingdom system from the 1970s. We don't use this system anymore, but the organisms which would have at one point been considered to be in the Monera kingdom are now dispersed throughout the Archaea and Bacteria domains
In the five kingdom system, the three kingdoms that have organisms capable of photosynthesis are some bacteria (mainly cyanobacteria) in the Kingdom Monera, algae in the Kingdom Protista, and plants in the Kingdom Plantae.
Monera used to be the Kingdom classification for bacteria
They are a group of organisms in the circle of life. For example, paramecium and bacteria are placed in the monera kingdom.
The economic importance of the Kingdom Monera is it used for soil fertility. The Kingdom Monera is bacteria. It is also used in foods such as vinegar, soy sauce, and cheese.
plantAlgae and some protozoans in kingdom protista are photosynthetic. Also some bacteria in kingdom monera are photosynthetic
some examples could be bacteria and blue algae
Kingdom Monera reproduces asexually through binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Some bacteria in Kingdom Monera also reproduce through methods like budding or fragmentation.
Virtually every animal (animalia) comprises eukaryotic cells.Prokaryots are mostly monera (bacteria), and blue-green algae which is often placed in the kingdom monera, but also in the kingdom fungi by some biologists.
some diseases caused by metazoa are pathogenesis and ddt
A kingdom that includes the bacteria and blue-green algae in some classification schemes.
exampless of monera are: bacteria and blue-green bacteria....... im not sure but i think eubacteria and archebacteria ....
Common bacteria belongs to the Kingdom Eubacteria. This is a recent change; some Biology textbooks still say Monera.
It actually is it's own kingdom. Its a kingdom that consists of cells that are single celled, microscopic, have a cell wall, and have no nucleus. Some can make their food others cannot. If you know about prokaryotic cells then you already know a lot about this kingdom.