bacteria. :)
the king doms that is many celled is bacteria,animals
if you mean the subkingdoms of the animal kingdom then they are: 1.Eumetazoa 2.Parazoa if you mean the kingdoms of biology then they are: 1.Bacteria 2.Protozoa3.Chromista 4.Fungi 5.Plantae6.Animalia (Protozoa and Chromista can be combined as one group, Protista.)
Yes, they are because they have at least one nucleus
Kakistocracy refers to a system of management controlled by the least qualified or most unscrupulous members of a society.
Definitely 3-three different kingdoms of living things (kingdom fungi-fungi/kingdom protista-algae/kingdom monera-cyanobacteria ). Source-http://www.lichen.com/biology.html
they show the least in kingdom and the most in phyla
There is ONE bacteria kingdom.
Scientists have classified microbes into different kingdoms based on their characteristics. The five-kingdom classification system includes the Kingdom Monera, which comprises most microbes like bacteria. However, advancements in microbiology have led to the recognition of additional microbial groups beyond traditional kingdom classifications.
Kingdom Protista is composed of eukaryotic organisms that cannot be classified as animals, plants, or fungi. Of the six kingdoms, Protista is the least accurate classification, because of the variety its members display.
Seaweeds belong to three kingdoms: Kingdom Plantae (chlorophyte, or "green" algae seaweeds), Kingdom Plantae (rhodophyte, or "red" algae seaweeds), Kingdom Chromista (phaeophyte, or "brown" algae seaweeds) Kingdom Chromista (xanthophyte, or "yellow-green" algae seaweeds), and Kingdom Bacteria (cyanophyte, or "blue-green" algae seaweeds). Seaweeds that belong to the Kingdom Plantae are plants; the others, strictly speaking, are not. Kombu (kelp), arame (kelp), limu moui (kelp), hijiki, mozuku, and wakame are not plants. Wikipedia places them under Kingdom Chromalveolata because they are classified as "brown" algae seaweeds. However, nori (laver), ogo (limu), and dulse are classified as "red" algae seaweeds and are placed under Kingdom Plantae. Kingdom Protista, which includes the chlorophyll-containing, self-propelling euglenozoa, is a fourth kingdom of algae which contains no species of seaweeds. Thomas Cavalier-Smith defined Kingdom Chromista in 1981 and redefined it as Kingdom Chromalveolata in 2005. However, in 2008, other biologists have proposed splitting Kingdom Chromalveolata into at least two smaller kingdoms and this newer version has gained increasing support. The cancer-preventing marine polysaccharide, fucoidan, and the weight loss causing marine carotenoid, fucoxanthin, are both always plentiful in "brown" algae seaweeds, including kombu, arame, limu moui, hijiki, mozuku, and wakame. "Yellow-green" algae seaweeds, which are never sold commercially, do not contain much fucoidan or fucoxanthin, even though they are still classified as members of Kingdom Chromalveolata together with the "brown" algae seaweeds.
the king doms that is many celled is bacteria,animals
The grouping begins with the domain, and in this case is Eukarya which has a total of 4 kingdoms. One of the kingdoms is Protista which consists of single cells, and are eukaryotic. They are larger than bacteria and producers and consumers.Classifying is as follows: (from most inclusive to least inclusive)Domain > Kingdom > Phylum > Class > Order > Family > Genera > Specie
if you mean the subkingdoms of the animal kingdom then they are: 1.Eumetazoa 2.Parazoa if you mean the kingdoms of biology then they are: 1.Bacteria 2.Protozoa3.Chromista 4.Fungi 5.Plantae6.Animalia (Protozoa and Chromista can be combined as one group, Protista.)
The species is the least inclusive taxonomic category as it consists of individual organisms that share similar characteristics and can interbreed to produce fertile offspring. It is more specific than the other categories listed (domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus).
The kingdom with the least amount of species is the kingdom Monera, which consists of unicellular prokaryotic organisms such as bacteria and archaea.
When environmental conditions change it is more likely that at least some members of a species will survive if there is variation among the members.
The kingdom that has existed for at least 3 billion years is the Kingdom Bacteria. Bacteria are single-celled organisms that have been on Earth for billions of years and are among the oldest forms of life on our planet.