Domain / KingdombacteriaArchaeaCrenarchaeotaEuryarchaeotaEukaryaProtoctistaPlantaeFungiAnimalia
(sometimes 'Anamalia'
No, in biological classification, Kingdom is a higher level of classification than Domain. Domains represent the highest level of biological classification, which can be further divided into kingdoms.
The kingdoms included in both Linnaean and Whittaker systems of classification are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera (or Prokaryotae in the Linnaean system).
The six kingdoms currently recognized for classification are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, and Bacteria. These kingdoms are based on their characteristics, such as cell structure, mode of nutrition, and reproduction methods.
At the point I only know five that I have learned from my science teacher.The five kingdoms in order are:MoneraProtistaFungiPlantAnimalThese are the five I know at the point.
Monera (Archaebacteria & Eubacteria), Protista, fungi, plantae, anamalia
No, in biological classification, Kingdom is a higher level of classification than Domain. Domains represent the highest level of biological classification, which can be further divided into kingdoms.
In the actual taxonomical classification, only 5 taxa are recognized at level of kingdoms; there's no need to have a new different one.
2
archaebacteria and eubacteria
The kingdoms included in both Linnaean and Whittaker systems of classification are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera (or Prokaryotae in the Linnaean system).
The six kingdoms currently recognized for classification are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, and Bacteria. These kingdoms are based on their characteristics, such as cell structure, mode of nutrition, and reproduction methods.
Your mother is that that's why
animals, plants, and protists
The original first two kingdoms were animals and plants.
The largest classification subgroup is the group "kingdoms." As the domain is the most general classification and the starting point of classification, kingdom is the largest as it's the first subgroup.
Aristotle's classification system primarily categorized living organisms into two kingdoms: Animalia (animals) and Plantae (plants). He based this classification on observable characteristics such as habitat, movement, and reproductive methods. While his system laid the groundwork for biological classification, it was later expanded to include more kingdoms as scientific understanding evolved, leading to the modern five and six kingdom systems.
Fungi