protists
No, kingdoms are broad classifications of organisms based on shared characteristics. Eukaryotes can be unicellular or multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists, while multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
Protists, plants, animals, and fungi are the eukaryotes
Eukaryotes can be both unicellular and multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists like amoebas and paramecia. Multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
These cells are called eukaryotes, and contain a nucleus and organellles, as opposed to the prokaryotic cells of the monera (bacteria) and blue-green algae which do not have a distinct nucleus.
The thing is Eukaryotes don't have a nucleus, but prokaryotes do. So if Archaebacteria and Eubacteria are prokaryotes, and Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals are Eukaryotes, than that means Archaebacteria and Eubacteria have a nucleus and Protists, Fungi, Plants and Animals don't have a nucleus.
No, kingdoms are broad classifications of organisms based on shared characteristics. Eukaryotes can be unicellular or multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists, while multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
Protists are eukaryotic cells (eukaryotes). Other eukaryotes are animals, plants and fungi.
Bacteria tend to be single celled organisms.
Protists, plants, animals, and fungi are the eukaryotes
The four main groups of eukaryotes are plants, animals, fungi, and protists. These groups encompass a wide variety of organisms with different characteristics and modes of life.
Kingdom Protista was created because the Eukaryotes don't have the distinctive characters of plants, animals or fungi. -- All of the Eukaryotes are mostly multi-cellular, while Protista is majority uni-cellular
All fungi are eukaryotes, like animals having a nucleus and mitochondria in their cells but lacking chloroplasts.
Animals are Eukaryotes. The Kingdoms Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia all fall under the domain Eukarya.
Eukaryotes can be both unicellular and multicellular. Examples of unicellular eukaryotes include protists like amoebas and paramecia. Multicellular eukaryotes include plants, animals, and fungi.
Examples of eukaryotes include animals (such as humans), plants (such as trees), fungi (such as mushrooms), protists (such as amoebas), and algae (such as seaweed).
No, fungi are Eukaryotes.
These cells are called eukaryotes, and contain a nucleus and organellles, as opposed to the prokaryotic cells of the monera (bacteria) and blue-green algae which do not have a distinct nucleus.