It is a plant
Fungi are classified in its own kingdom, not under plantae.
The kingdom Plantae is comprised of the green plants. These plants have cell walls with cellulose and mostly gather energy from sunlight by photosynthesis. They're also characterized by alternation of generations and sexual reproduction.
Mycophycota is not a recognized scientific classification. It seems there may have been a mix-up in terms. "Mycophycota" could be a combination of "myco-" referring to fungi and "phycota" referring to algae, but these are two different groups of organisms. Fungi belong to the kingdom Fungi, while algae are part of the kingdom Protista or Plantae, depending on the type of algae.
Archeobactetia
Protozoans and algae belong to the kindgom Protista. Algae are plant-like, and protozoa are animal-lie. There are two plural forms of protozoan: protozoa and protozoans.
Fungi are classified in its own kingdom, not under plantae.
Kingdom Plantae and Kingdom Animalia
Main kingdom is plantae. Also some in protista
Plantae has cell walls of cellulose and Animalia does not.Plantae is an Autotroph and Animalia is a Heterotroph.
Plantae has cell walls of cellulose and Animalia does not.Plantae is an Autotroph and Animalia is a Heterotroph.
KINGDOM ANIMALIA AND KINGDOM PLANTAE? ANIMALS AND PLANTS.
In the five kingdom system, the three kingdoms that have organisms capable of photosynthesis are some bacteria (mainly cyanobacteria) in the Kingdom Monera, algae in the Kingdom Protista, and plants in the Kingdom Plantae.
Linnaeus named the Animalia and Plantae Kingdoms. Linnaeus named two kingdoms by the names Animalia and Plantae kingdoms. He also ordered them from the largest to the smallest.
The kingdom Plantae is comprised of the green plants. These plants have cell walls with cellulose and mostly gather energy from sunlight by photosynthesis. They're also characterized by alternation of generations and sexual reproduction.
Mycophycota is not a recognized scientific classification. It seems there may have been a mix-up in terms. "Mycophycota" could be a combination of "myco-" referring to fungi and "phycota" referring to algae, but these are two different groups of organisms. Fungi belong to the kingdom Fungi, while algae are part of the kingdom Protista or Plantae, depending on the type of algae.
Linnaeus created a two-kingdom system, classifying organisms into the Kingdom Plantae and the Kingdom Animalia based on their characteristics.
Algae were once considered plants, but they are now classified into two different kingdoms: Kingdom Plantae and Kingdom Protista. This is due to genetic and structural differences that distinguish them from true plants.