No, Ebola is not a monera type. Monera refers to a kingdom that includes prokaryotic organisms such as bacteria and archaea. Ebola is a virus, specifically belonging to the Filoviridae family, which is classified as a part of the viral domain rather than the monera kingdom.
No, a bird is not a type of Monera. Birds belong to the kingdom Animalia, whereas Monera is a now-obsolete classification that included prokaryotic organisms, such as bacteria and archaea. Monera has been replaced by two separate domains: Bacteria and Archaea. Thus, birds and Monera are classified in entirely different biological kingdoms.
Ebola has a single stranded set of RNA
Monera is an outdated biological classification for unicellular organisms like bacteria. In a sentence: "Scientists used to categorize bacteria and other unicellular organisms under the kingdom Monera."
Ebola
Virology, a part of microbiology
The word 'Ebola' is not a pronoun.The word 'Ebola' is a noun, a word for a type of infectious disease, a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun Ebola is it.Example: Ebola is a viral disease. Itcurrently has no cure. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'Ebola' in the second sentence)
monera
They can be both. Meaning they can reproduce by themselves or with a partner.
Ebola virus is a pathogen that causes diseases of the circulatory system. This can cause failure of most organs and serious bleeding or hemorrhaging.
Ebola hf stands for Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever.
Ebola hf stands for Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever.
The Ebola virus