monera is a single-celled organism. it is very simple and small
e.g. bacteria and cyanbacteria
Kingdom Monera Prokaryotic single-celled with no nucleus
Monera are prokaryotic organisms. They are single-celled organisms that lack a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles.
Most protista are unicellular, but not all are. Google Chlorophyta and Rhodophyta for examples of multicelled protista.
Bacteria are single celled prokaryotes that have their DNA loose in the cytosol and no membrane bound organelles. Fungi are eukaryotes with a membrane bound nucleus containing DNA and many membrane bound organelles. Some fungi are single celled, but most are multicelled and heterotrophic.
"Kingdom Monera" is an older biological classification that grouped bacteria into a single kingdom. However, this classification system is no longer widely used in modern taxonomy, as bacteria are now typically classified into multiple domains (Bacteria and Archaea) based on genetic and evolutionary relationships.
single-celled
multicelled
It is multi celled.
Kingdom Monera Prokaryotic single-celled with no nucleus
Multicellular
because it is the cell wall
Monera are bacteria and other mostly tiny, single-celled organisms whose genetic material is loose in the cell.
No, Monera is a taxonomic group that includes bacteria and archaea, which are microscopic single-celled organisms. They are not typically consumed as food by humans.
Most protista are unicellular, but not all are. Google Chlorophyta and Rhodophyta for examples of multicelled protista.
Monera are prokaryotic organisms. They are single-celled organisms that lack a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles.
Bacteria and cyanobacteria belong to the kingdom Monera. Monera is a now outdated taxonomic group that included all prokaryotic organisms, which are single-celled organisms lacking a nucleus.
Kingdom Animalia are chemoheterotroph in terms of their mode of nutrition. They consume organic compounds, carbonically for energy sources.