Kingdoms of Life are:
Monera
Fungi
Protista
Planae
Animalia
Animal families are:
sponges
jellyfish & corals
worms
mollusks
starfish, sand dollars and sea urchins
crustaceans
centipiedes and millipedes
arachnicds
insects
fish
amphibians
reptiles
birds
mammals
During Linnaeus's time, life was divided into the kingdoms Plantae (plants) and Animalia (animals).
Eukaryacan be divided into four kingdoms. Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
The four kingdoms in multicellularity are animals, plants, fungi, and protists. Animals are heterotrophic organisms with specialized cells and tissues. Plants are autotrophic organisms capable of photosynthesis. Fungi are either decomposers or parasites, and protists are a diverse group of eukaryotic organisms.
The animal kingdom is distantly related to other kingdoms because animals are unique in their development from a common ancestor that diverged evolutionarily from other organisms. This evolutionary divergence led animals to develop distinct characteristics, such as multicellularity, heterotrophy, and specialized tissues/organs, that differentiate them from other kingdoms like plants, fungi, and protists.
The main difference is that the plant kingdom has cell walls, and the animal kingdom doesn't. Plants use photosynthesis to create energy from sunlight, while animals use metabolism to create energy from food.
there are over 500 animals at animal in kingdoms
If you are referring to the taxonomic Kingdom Animalia, the remaining Kingdoms have no animals. If you are referring to political kingdoms, there are a wide variety of different animals scattered across the globe.
The 5 Kingdoms are: Fungi, Plants, Animals, Prokaryotes and Protoctistans.
insects and animals
bcoz are so many animals that exist and study of such a huge no. of animals is not a piece of cake ready to eat. So to make the study easier the scientists categorised the animals into different kingdoms.
animals
animals, plants, and protists
plants, animals, monera, protists, fungi there are only 5 kingdoms
During Linnaeus's time, life was divided into the kingdoms Plantae (plants) and Animalia (animals).
bulldogs and lions
animals
Plants and animals