Kingdoms and species are similar in that they both play a role in classifying and organizing living organisms based on shared characteristics. Kingdoms represent the broadest classification level, while species is the most specific level, representing individuals that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring. Both help scientists understand the diversity and relationships among different organisms in the natural world.
The archaebacteria are the only anaerobic species, who do not tolerate free oxygen.
- a domain is the highest level of organization - within a domain, there are kingdoms - withing kingdoms, there are phyla (singular phylum) - within phyla are classes - within classes are orders - within orders are families - each family contains one or more genera - each genus contains one or more species
The next broader classification above species is the genus. Genera are groups of species that share common characteristics and are closely related. Genera are grouped together into families, which are then further grouped into orders, classes, phyla, and kingdoms in the hierarchical classification system.
Domain / KingdombacteriaArchaeaCrenarchaeotaEuryarchaeotaEukaryaProtoctistaPlantaeFungiAnimalia (sometimes 'Anamalia'
A genus is a taxonomic rank that includes one or more species that are closely related. It represents a group of species that share common characteristics and ancestry. Genera are further organized into families, then orders, classes, phyla, and ultimately kingdoms in the classification system.
they are not
they are alike
They are a moving, eukaryotic organism.
Both have parasitic species.
A. species
There are about 60,000 different species of the protists. Protista is one of the five kingdoms of organisms.
Spotting lichens is challenging enough. Identifying them is even harder. Many species look exactly alike, even when they are only distant cousins. Closely related species, meanwhile, can live in totally different enviorments, or on opposite ends of the Eatch. (One species, for example, is found only near both poles.)
Darwin
The 9 kingdoms are Kingdom, Phylum, Class, order, family, genus, and species.
no they can be but aren't always from the same species
the phylum Porifera
Kingdom, Class, Order Family , And Species.