False HAHAHA Plato is so easy
its no fungi
If you're asking about the seven kingdom scheme, this is the sitch: there are actually only five kingdoms: -Kingdom Animalia (Animals) -Kingdom Plantae (Plants) -Kingdom Fungi -Kingdom Protista (Protists) -Kingdom Monera (Viruses and Bacteria) then another kingdom was proposed, because the organisms that belong to that kingdom have very unque characteristics: -Kingdom Archaebacteria (Archaebacteria) Additonal two more kingdoms are proposed these days: -Kingdom Archezoa -Kingdom Chromista But if your asking on the LEVELS of classification, that's a different story. Ü
Robert Whittaker is credited with replacing the 2 kingdom taxonomic system (plants and animals) with the 5 taxonomic kingdom system. His system included the kingdoms of Monera (now split into bacteria and archaea), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
The classification system of taxonomy must be done in a certain hierarchical order following the Domain:KingdomPhylumClassOrderFamilyGenusSpeciesThe five kingdom system has now been replaced by a six kingdom system. There is no specific hierarchy in the kingdoms. The five were:Animalia (animal)Plantae (plant)Fungi (fungi)Protista (comprised by various one-celled animals)MoneraModern classification is based on a six Kingdom system:AnimaliaPlantaeFungiProtistaArchaebacteriaEubacteriaMonera was split into the two Kingdoms of Archaebacteria and Eubacteria for better groupings now that technology allows genetic testing to analyze the properties and classify more appropriately.
Whittaker's kingdom classification system is a five-kingdom classification system based on cell, tissue, and body structure. The five kingdoms were Protista, Prokaryota,Metaphyta, Metazoa, and Fungi.
its no fungi
Monera -Gotta help my fellow Plato users! :D
In the five kingdom classification scheme archaea are placed in their own kingdom called archaea. This is a kingdom of single celled organisms.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Allactaga sibirica.
Single-celled algae belong to Kingdom Protista, in the five kingdom scheme of classification. Multicellular algae, however, belong to the Planta Kingdom.
If you're asking about the seven kingdom scheme, this is the sitch: there are actually only five kingdoms: -Kingdom Animalia (Animals) -Kingdom Plantae (Plants) -Kingdom Fungi -Kingdom Protista (Protists) -Kingdom Monera (Viruses and Bacteria) then another kingdom was proposed, because the organisms that belong to that kingdom have very unque characteristics: -Kingdom Archaebacteria (Archaebacteria) Additonal two more kingdoms are proposed these days: -Kingdom Archezoa -Kingdom Chromista But if your asking on the LEVELS of classification, that's a different story. Ü
Robert Whittaker is credited with replacing the 2 kingdom taxonomic system (plants and animals) with the 5 taxonomic kingdom system. His system included the kingdoms of Monera (now split into bacteria and archaea), Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
The classification system of taxonomy must be done in a certain hierarchical order following the Domain:KingdomPhylumClassOrderFamilyGenusSpeciesThe five kingdom system has now been replaced by a six kingdom system. There is no specific hierarchy in the kingdoms. The five were:Animalia (animal)Plantae (plant)Fungi (fungi)Protista (comprised by various one-celled animals)MoneraModern classification is based on a six Kingdom system:AnimaliaPlantaeFungiProtistaArchaebacteriaEubacteriaMonera was split into the two Kingdoms of Archaebacteria and Eubacteria for better groupings now that technology allows genetic testing to analyze the properties and classify more appropriately.
classification of microbe kingdom or classification of plant, animal classification, or five kingdom classification of micro organisms
Easy. The universal ancestor kingdom category has to do with the ancestors of everyone in the universe and what they had done to the universe to improve or deduct to our earlier answers to problems such as this one when the previous five kingdoms of classification had simply to do with what people had accomplished.
Whittaker's kingdom classification system is a five-kingdom classification system based on cell, tissue, and body structure. The five kingdoms were Protista, Prokaryota,Metaphyta, Metazoa, and Fungi.
http://apbio.biosci.uga.edu/exam/Essays/html/standards/1999_standard3.html this website has the AP test score guide for that whole question