There are three major phylum for bacteria. These include Aquificae,Firmicutes, and Protobacteria.
some of the major characteristics of the phylum are a shared body plan, embryonic development patterns, and specific molecular sequences.
Phylum is the second broadest classification grouping for animals, following Kingdom. Phylum divides animals into major groups based on general characteristics such as body structure and organization. Examples of phyla include Chordata (which includes vertebrates) and Arthropoda (which includes insects and crustaceans).
The seven levels of classification for archea, in order from broadest to most specific, are domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, and genus. Each level describes a different aspect of the organism's characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
The three common characteristics of animals in the phylum Arthropoda are: having a segmented body with paired jointed legs, having a hard exoskeleton made of chitin, and undergoing ecdysis, or molting, to grow.
In biology, a phylum is a taxonomic rank that is used to classify organisms with similar body plans. Organisms within the same phylum share certain characteristics and evolutionary history. It is a major category in the classification of living organisms.
What are the three type of archea?
What are the three type of archea?
salt loving heat loving methane- making
some of the major characteristics of the phylum are a shared body plan, embryonic development patterns, and specific molecular sequences.
A domain is the highest level of taxonomy, including only the following three in the 3 domain standard system- Archea, Eukarya, and Bacteria. From there the taxonomy tree goes on to Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.
Archea Bacteria are a domain of organisms that live in extreme environments.
yes archea eat so much it is just sad
KingdomPhylumClassOrderFamilyGenusSpecies
Archaea is a type/phylum of living things. 3 groups/classes/orders of Archaea: Crenarchaeota Euryarchaeota Korarchaeota
no
a phylum
extremophiles