Kingdom, Division, Class, Order, Family, Genus and Species.
Earlier fungi were also classified in plnat kingdom. Now in modern classification these have been assingned a separate kingdom because their structure and function is quite different from rest of the plant kingdom.
The plant kingdom is grouped based on shared characteristics such as being multicellular, having cell walls made of cellulose, and conducting photosynthesis to produce food. Plants also share a common ancestor, leading to their classification as a distinct kingdom within the biological classification system.
members of the plant kingdom are multicellular
yes all moss is part of the plant kingdom
Wheat belongs to the Plantae kingdom, which is the same kingdom that includes all plants.
1DK
Vascular and non vascular
What are the 5 different divisions of the Fungi Kingdom?Sac FungiClub FungiImperfect FungiZygote FungiLichens
The plant kingdom is divided into different divisions (phyla) based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. Some common divisions include Bryophyta (mosses), Pteridophyta (ferns), Coniferophyta (conifers), and Anthophyta (flowering plants).
In the plant kingdom, the term "division" is used instead of "phylum" to classify plants based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. So, divisions are the equivalent rank to phylum in the plant kingdom.
All plants are in the plant kingdom. The kingdoms are the largest divisions, so they contain the most organisms.
The two highest level taxa in the Linnaean system are the kingdom and phylum, except in plants, which have divisions instead of phyla.
Algae is a plant ... in the past they were all considered to share a common ancestor ( monophyletic ) so were all grouped in the Plant kingdom ... today they are thought to have different ancestors ( polyphyletic ) and are placed in several different divisions within the Plant kingdom while unicellular and colonial algae are placed in separate kingdom Protista ( these would not be plants since they are not multicellular despite the fact they are photosynthetic ). Keep in mind there are bacteria capable of photosynthesis but these are all placed in the kingdom Monera which contains the bacteria and "Blue Green Algae" ... due primarily to there cell structure ( they are prokaryotic and not eukaryotic like members of the Plant kingdom ... and they are also single celled organisms amongst other differences ) It's also interesting that Fungi also were once placed in the plant Kingdom but now are placed in the Kingdom Fungi. Good Day ...
There are 12 divisions of plantae
Plants belong to the Kingdom Plantae, which is further classified into various divisions. The division is equivalent to the phylum for plants and includes groups like angiosperms (flowering plants), gymnosperms (cone-bearing plants), bryophytes (mosses), and ferns.
Earlier fungi were also classified in plnat kingdom. Now in modern classification these have been assingned a separate kingdom because their structure and function is quite different from rest of the plant kingdom.
No, producers can belong to different kingdoms depending on the ecosystem. In addition to plants in the plant kingdom, there are also producers like algae in the protist kingdom and certain bacteria in the monera kingdom.