No, organisms in the same kingdom do not have to belong to the same domain. Kingdom is a broader classification level than domain. Organisms in the same kingdom share similar characteristics and traits, but they can belong to different domains, which are higher-level classifications.
Yes, because domain is a broader category or larger group than a kingdom.
Organisms that belong to the same class must also belong to the same phylum. Classes are subdivisions of phyla in the classification hierarchy of organisms.
== == At one time, bacteria were also considered protists, under the three-kingdom system of Animalia (corresponding closely to the modern kingdom), Plantae (which included Fungi as well as plants), and Protista (everything else). Now, living organisms are are put into 6 kingdoms: # plantea (plants): phototrophic, multicellular, form embryos # animalia (animals): heterotrophic, multicellular, form embryos # mycetea (fungi) : heterotrophic, multicellular or unicellular, with chitin cell walls # protoctista (commonly known as protista) (algae, protozoa, slime molds): photototrophic or heterotrophic, multicellular or unicellular, don't form embryos, no chitin cell wall.The protists can vary greatly from all the rest of the kingdoms, in that they can also be mixotrophic. They can also reproduce asexually in one host, then produce sexually in another host. They can be unicellular, colonial, or multicellular. # eubacteria (modern bacteria): prokaryotic. # archaebacteria (ancient bacteria): also prokaryotic. viruses are not considered organisms
Phylum. Organisms in the same class belong to the same phylum, which is a higher taxonomic rank that groups organisms based on shared characteristics.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
Yes, because domain is a broader category or larger group than a kingdom.
Organisms that belong to the same class must also belong to the same phylum. Classes are subdivisions of phyla in the classification hierarchy of organisms.
An organism cannot be both an animal and a fungi, it must be one or the other. Examples of fungi are mushrooms and molds.
== == At one time, bacteria were also considered protists, under the three-kingdom system of Animalia (corresponding closely to the modern kingdom), Plantae (which included Fungi as well as plants), and Protista (everything else). Now, living organisms are are put into 6 kingdoms: # plantea (plants): phototrophic, multicellular, form embryos # animalia (animals): heterotrophic, multicellular, form embryos # mycetea (fungi) : heterotrophic, multicellular or unicellular, with chitin cell walls # protoctista (commonly known as protista) (algae, protozoa, slime molds): photototrophic or heterotrophic, multicellular or unicellular, don't form embryos, no chitin cell wall.The protists can vary greatly from all the rest of the kingdoms, in that they can also be mixotrophic. They can also reproduce asexually in one host, then produce sexually in another host. They can be unicellular, colonial, or multicellular. # eubacteria (modern bacteria): prokaryotic. # archaebacteria (ancient bacteria): also prokaryotic. viruses are not considered organisms
If all poplar trees belong to the same order, then they all belong to the same family. In biological classification, the hierarchy goes from domain to kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. Therefore, since they are classified under the same order, they must share a common family classification as well.
Animalia
Phylum. Organisms in the same class belong to the same phylum, which is a higher taxonomic rank that groups organisms based on shared characteristics.
Animalia
The fungi kingdom contains non-photosynthetic multicellular organisms that digest their food externally. Examples of fungi are yeasts, smuts, molds and mushrooms
Animals >>>>>>>>>> Invertebrates >>>>>>>>>>> Jellyfish>>>>>>>>>>> CoralCoral comes under the kingdom Jellyfish, not starfish and sea urchins. I didn't know which one it came under but then i did some research and found out that jellyfish and coral are built in the same way so coral must be in the jellyfish kingdom.
Absorbing other cells gave a competitive advantage.
Organisms that belong to the same species can reproduce a fertile offspring.