Archaebacteria and Eubacteria are the two prokaryotic kingdoms in the current 6-kingdom system.
The unicellular prokaryotes in the domain Bacteria are classified in the kingdom Bacteria.
The domain Eukarya is made up of organisms with nuclei. This domain includes animals, plants, fungi, and protists that have cells with a defined nucleus containing their genetic material.
The classification of prokaryotic life is subject to a lot of change and in the past has been a very controversial subject.For years the main kingdoms were considered to be Prokaryotes, Animals, Plants and Fungi but this has subsequently proven to be too broad.The Prokaryotic kingdom was initially split into two new kingdoms:EubacteriaandarchaebacteriaRecent RNA studies of these kingdoms have revealed that this classification is too simplified too and that despite being single celled organisms with no true organelles the Eubacteria differ sufficiently within their own kingdom to be split into further kingdoms.This means that they can be considered to be as different from one another as plants are from animals.The Eubacteria classification is therefore one of a Superkingdom. The two kingdoms within it contain, for the sake of simplicity, the gram negative and gram positive bacteria (those who don't take up the gram stain and those who do).The first of these are called protobacteria and contain E. Coli and other similar bacteria that are human pathogens. However other human pathogens such as Staphylococcus are in the gram positive kingdom.Many scientists have been trying to discover if any archaebacteria can be human pathogens but at the time of writing we have been unable to find evidence of any.The superkingdom that contains bacterial pathogens is therefore eubacteria and both kingdoms within it contain pathogens.
Substances can be classified as elements, compounds, or mixtures. Elements are made up of only one type of atom, compounds are made up of two or more different elements chemically bonded together, and mixtures are combinations of two or more substances that are not chemically bonded.
A species name is made up of two parts: the genus name and the specific epithet. Together, they form the binomial nomenclature system developed by Carl Linnaeus for organizing and categorizing living organisms.
The two kingdoms of prokaryotes are Bacteria and Archaea. Bacteria are more common and have cell walls made of peptidoglycan, while Archaea are less common and have cell walls made of different substances. Both types of prokaryotes lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
Bacteria are prokaryotes, viruses are not classified within the six kingdoms of life, and so are neither prokaryotes nor eukaryotes.
Carl Woese split up the prokaryotes into two kingdoms, creating a total of six kingdoms.
Eubacteria and archaeabacteria.
Eubacteria and archaeabacteria.
eubacteria
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eukaryotes
The Animalia kingdom includes all multicellular animals, while the Plantae kingdom includes all multicellular plants. Both kingdoms consist of organisms that are made up of multiple cells working together to carry out various functions.
Scotland & England
true
Protoctista Kingdom