Monera Protista Fungi Animalia Plantae
There are currently five kingdoms of living things: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera. Each kingdom is based on different characteristics and includes different groups of organisms.
Domain: Bacteria, Kingdom BacteriaDomain: Archaea, Kingdom ArchaeaDomain: Eukarya: Kingdom ProtistaKingdom FungiKingdom PlantaeKingdom Animalia
The Whittaker five-kingdom classification system categorizes living organisms into five main groups: Monera (bacteria), Protista (unicellular organisms), Fungi (molds and mushrooms), Plantae (plants), and Animalia (animals). This system is based on the organism's cell type, method of obtaining nutrition, and complexity of the organism's structure.
Viruses are not classified in a kingdom because they do not possess all the characteristics of living organisms. They lack cellular structure, cannot carry out metabolic processes on their own, and cannot reproduce without a host cell. As a result, they are often considered biological entities that straddle the line between living and non-living.
its no fungi
The five kingdoms are Monera, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia.
There is a five kingdom system Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
Living ThingsPeopleDogsCatsBirdsSquirrelsNon-LivingRoadsBuildingsVehiclesRocksPlaygrounds
eubacteria is the smallest kingdom
Kingdom.
In taxonomy (organization of living things), the "Kingdom" is the broadest classification of any living. Cacti are plants; therefore, the kingdom of the cactus is the plant kingdom.
The "Coral Kingdom" lives on land and absorbs its food from other living or nonliving things.
monera
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The classification of living things includes 7 levels: kingdom, phylum, classes, order, families, genus, and species . The most basic classification of living things is kingdoms. Currently there are five kingdoms.
The "Coral Kingdom" lives on land and absorbs its food from other living or nonliving things.
Animal Kingdom.