Kingdom Monera consists of tiny organisms like bacteria. They live virtually everywhere, including inside humans and animals. They can live in many different environments.
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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.
plantae, monera and protista
The Kingdom Monera refers to the kingdom that have no nuclear membrane. An example is the bacteria. The Kingdom can also be described as a group that contains the unicellular organisms.
There are more than two types of organisms withing Kingdom Monera, but the two domains within Monera are Archaea and Bacteria.
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monera
Monera Kingdom
Monera kingdom
is the monera the name of biological kingdom
1
No, an amoeba is not classified under the Monera kingdom. Amoebas belong to the Protista kingdom. Monera is a traditional kingdom that includes bacteria and archaea.
The kingdom of Monera is a taxonomic group that includes all prokaryotic organisms, such as bacteria and archaea. These organisms are characterized by their lack of a membrane-bound nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Monera is one of the five kingdoms in the traditional biological classification system.
Kingdom Monera
archaebacteria
Monera used to be the Kingdom classification for bacteria
No, Kingdom Monera was proposed by biologist Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Herbert Copeland later revised the classification system and divided Kingdom Monera into two separate groups: Eubacteria (true bacteria) and Archaebacteria (ancient bacteria).