The archaebacteria are unicellular.
The common name for the Archaebacteria kingdom is archaea.
Prokaryotes that are found in environments that are extreme are classified in the Archaebacteria kingdom. The kingdom consists of single-celled microorganisms.
Animalia is the kingdom that consists only of complex multicellular eukaryotic organisms.
It contains both. Kingdom Protista is a large and very diverse group of organisms and can live as unicellular, multicellular, and in some cases, colonial cells.
The Animalia kingdom includes all multicellular animals, while the Plantae kingdom includes all multicellular plants. Both kingdoms consist of organisms that are made up of multiple cells working together to carry out various functions.
Archaebacteria is the kingdom that autotrophic multicellular organisms belong to.
The common name for the Archaebacteria kingdom is archaea.
They have their own kingdom called Archaebacteria.
There are commonly recognized five animal kingdoms: Kingdom Animalia, Kingdom Plantae, Kingdom Fungi, Kingdom Protista, and Kingdom Monera. The animal kingdom specifically belongs to Kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular organisms that are eukaryotic and heterotrophic.
single-celled
single-celled
Archaebacteria
They are in the archaebacteria kingdom
They are their kingdom names
members of the plant kingdom are multicellular
No, they are not. Fungi are their own kingdom.
Yes, archaebacteria is the smallest kingdom. Next comes eubacteria, protist, fungi, plants and then animals