Cyanobacteria is in the Eubacteria kingdom. It is an algae that makes its own food through photosynthesis and is blue-green in color.
a group of photosynthetic bacteria, sometimes called the "blue-green algae," that contain the chlorophyll pigments most abundant in plants and algae, as well as other pigments.
Cyanobacteria are in the domain bacteria because they lack a true nucleus.
Kingdom: bacteria
It is in the bacteria kingdom
Bacteria
Eubacteria
yes
Nostocales The Nostocales order contains most of the species of cyanobacteria. It includes filamentous forms, both simple or branched, and both those occurring as single strands or multiple strands within a sheath. Jon. Anderson Olympia, Washington
In America, Bacteria are considered to be one of the 5 kingdoms. It is also a domain, along with Archaea and Eukaryota.
The taxonomy of blue-green algae is in transition, this means it can being dealt in botanical nomenclature code or bacteriological nomenclature code. They seem to have the characters of algae and bacteria respectively.
Unicellular prokaryotic organisms are actually broken up into the Bacteria and Archaea domains. The Bacteria domain has several shapes, and the Archaea domain generally resembles the bacteria domain.
"Bacteria" refers to a whole domain of organisms, which is a classificational level above kingdom. The domain is called "Bacteria", and it contains several kingdoms of bacteria. Cyanobacteria are their own kingdom, generally called "Cyanobacteria" which is part of Archaebacteria.
Cyanobacteria is the phylum of bacteria. Often called blue-green algae, it belongs to the bacteria domain and the eubacteria kingdom.
Spirochaetes Deinococcus-Thermus Aquificae Cyanobacteria Chloroflexi Thermotogae Proteobacteria Firmicutes
yes
cyanobacteria
No. This is false.
The four groups of photosynthetic bacteria are brownish nonsulfur, green sulfur, purple sulfur, and purple nonsulfur bacteria. Bacteria constitute a significant domain of what are referred to as prokaryotic microorganisms.
Nostocales The Nostocales order contains most of the species of cyanobacteria. It includes filamentous forms, both simple or branched, and both those occurring as single strands or multiple strands within a sheath. Jon. Anderson Olympia, Washington
like bacteria members of the domain archaea are unicellular prokaryotes
false
Bacteria
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