Eukaryotes
Bacteria are prokaryotes, viruses are not classified within the six kingdoms of life, and so are neither prokaryotes nor eukaryotes.
Woese, in 1990, divided the prokaryotes (previously classified as the Kingdom Monera) into two groups, called Eubacteria and Archaebacteria or Archaea.
No. Only some bacteria have a flagellum.
Bacteria are considered to be living because they fulfill the requirements of the Cell Theory. Viruses, however, are generally classified as nonliving because they are not made of cells, they cannot reproduce independently, they generally do not react to noxious stimuli, etc.
At one time, all living things were classified into two kingdoms of plants and animals. Aristotle developed this first classification system.
no
Bacteria are classified in the kingdom Bacteria.
It is a different name for the kingdom Monera, where all the bacteria is classified in.
The consensus among biologists is that only 5 to 10% of the trillions of cells in our bodies are human. The rest are alien cells: yeast, fungi, bacteria, viruses. Some are essential to our digestion, some are potentially dangerous, and most are just enjoying lunch.
bacteria
Bacteria can be classified based on the number and arrangement of flagella. Monotrichous bacteria have a single flagellum, amphitrichous bacteria have a flagellum at each end, lophotrichous bacteria have multiple flagella at one or both ends, and peritrichous bacteria have flagella distributed all over the cell surface.
The unicellular prokaryotes in the domain Bacteria are classified in the kingdom Bacteria.
my idea is that it is classified as a bacteria affiliated disease.
bacteria, pathogens, viruses. NN=(all of the above)
Prokaryote.
Bacteria is considered a scavenger. Bacteria is classified as a Paramecium. It is referred to as microbial vultures.
Bacteria are not classified by the number of chromosomes, or the type of mitochondria.