Animalia.
Brown bears belong to the kingdom Animalia
Water bears belong in the kindgom Animalia.
animalia
They belong to the division of the Plant Kingdom called Angiosperms
There are 16 subspecies of the species ursus arctos (brown bear). These include, among others, the Kodiak bear, the inland grizzly bear, the Himalayan Brown Bear and the Marsican Brown Bear.
The brown bear has a large range, extending from North America to Asia.They live in forests, mountains, and even on prairie and coastlines, as in Alaska.In regards to taxonomic domain, the brown bear is a mammal, and all mammals belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
The grizzly bear is a member of the Ursidae family. Grizzlies are a sub-species of the brown bear. They belong to the Carnivora order and the Mammalia class.
The brown bear does not belong. It is a placental mammal, not a marsupial like the others in the list.
The bear belongs to the kingdom Animalia and to the family Ursidae. Bears are further classified by subfamilies. For example, while a panda belongs to the subfamily Alluropodinae, an American bear is in the subfamily Ursinae.
it belongs to bear familyactually, it is not a bear, it is part of the raccoon family
Bears belong to:Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataSubphylum: VertebrataClass: MammaliaOrder: CarnivoraSuborder: FissipediaFamily: Ursidae
No, brown algae are not fungus-like protists. Brown algae are a type of multicellular, photosynthetic algae that belong to the kingdom Chromista, while fungus-like protists are organisms that display characteristics of both fungi and protists, and belong to the kingdom Protista.