protist
Caulerpa belongs to the kingdom Plantae as it is a type of green algae.
chlorophyte, green algae, genus desmidium, desmidium
The largest algae belong to the phylum Phaeophyta, also known as brown algae. Brown algae include seaweeds such as kelp, which can grow to be quite large in size.
Cyanobacteria may also be called blue-green algae due to their blue-green pigmentation resulting from chlorophyll a and phycocyanin. Despite the name, cyanobacteria are not algae but rather a type of bacteria capable of photosynthesis. They are important in the environment for their role in oxygen production and nitrogen fixation.
The horse belongs to the Equidae Family.
Blue-green algae belong to the Kingdom Bacteria, specifically in the phylum Cyanobacteria.
All algae belong to protista
Plantae
Green algae belong to Kingdom Protista. Green algae is a very diverse type of algae. Actually, green algae is sort of similar to plants. The green algae contain two forms of chlorophyll and capture light energy to produce sugar in similar with the plant. However, unlike the plants the green algae are aquatic. The species are named algae because they are aquatic and make their own food.
The answer to that question varies depending on the type of algae. Blue Green algae belongs to Monera Unicellular algae: Protista Multicultural algae the most common such as Red, Brown, and green algae belong to the Metaphyta (plantae) kingdom
Kingdom Protista
fungi because it's bacteria and it's blue and green algae.
Caulerpa belongs to the kingdom Plantae as it is a type of green algae.
No, algae are not part of the fungi kingdom. They belong to their own kingdom called Protista. Algae are photosynthetic organisms that can be unicellular or multicellular, whereas fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain nutrients through absorption.
AP Bio take home test, huh? Taking it as we speak. Answer is B. Cholorphytes (unless your teacher scrambled the answers or mine did then it would be a different letter, but the answer is chlorophytes).
Green algae are more closely related to red algae than to brown algae. Both green and red algae belong to the Archaeplastida supergroup, which includes plants and their relatives. In contrast, brown algae are part of the stramenopiles, a separate lineage. This phylogenetic distinction highlights the closer evolutionary relationship between green and red algae.
i dont know i m a student of class 9 and i m searching for the answer for - diff. b/w spirogyra and blue green alga