Actually amoeba and paramecium is protista. Animalia (animals) is actually human, fish and etc that cannot produce their own food (heterotroph) and multicellular. Amoeba is unicellular but still heterotroph. Protista can be autotroph or hetorotroph. But animalia is only heterotroph.
No, muticellular.
Fungi and protists
The five kingdoms of life, ordered from most to least complex, are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera. Animalia encompasses multicellular organisms with complex tissues, while Plantae includes multicellular plants that perform photosynthesis. Fungi are primarily multicellular decomposers, Protista consists of mostly unicellular organisms with diverse characteristics, and Monera includes unicellular prokaryotes like bacteria. This classification reflects increasing simplicity from complex multicellular forms to simpler unicellular organisms.
The kingdom that includes complex multicellular organisms that obtain food by breaking down other substances in their surroundings is Fungi. Fungi are heterotrophic organisms that absorb nutrients from their environment through extracellular digestion.
The five kingdoms of microorganisms include Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Monera consists of prokaryotic organisms, such as bacteria and archaea. Protista includes unicellular and some multicellular eukaryotic organisms, like protozoa and algae. Fungi are primarily multicellular eukaryotes, while Plantae and Animalia encompass multicellular organisms, with Plantae being autotrophic and Animalia being heterotrophic.
eukaryotic
Not all kingdoms include unicellular organisms. The kingdoms that do not have unicellular organisms include the plantae and animalia kingdom.
No. Protists are unicellular, or unicellular organisms which form multicellular structures. Arthropods, including insects, spiders, crabs, lobsters, etc., clearly aren't unicellular. They belong to the kingdom animalia.
Mostly multicellular: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi. Mostly unicellular: Protista.
No, muticellular.
Unicellular, no nucleus visible, bacteria :Monera , unicellular organisms, eukaryotic, amoeba :Protista , Motile, heterotrophic, multicellular, cat :Animalia , Sessile, autotrophic, multicellular, rose :Plantae
Fungi and protists
The 5 kingdoms are fungi, plante, eubacteria, protista, and animalia. But only 3 out of the 5 are multicellular. The three kingdoms that are multicellular are: 1) fungi 2) animalia 3) plante
The cell kingdom that includes both multicellular and unicellular organisms is the Protista kingdom. This kingdom consists of various types of eukaryotic organisms that do not fit into the other major kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi). Some protists are unicellular, while others are multicellular.
The five kingdom classification system groups organisms into five kingdoms based on their characteristics and evolutionary relationships. These kingdoms are: Monera (bacteria), Protista (unicellular eukaryotes), Fungi (multicellular decomposers), Plantae (multicellular photosynthetic organisms), and Animalia (multicellular heterotrophs).
The five kingdoms of life, ordered from most to least complex, are Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Monera. Animalia encompasses multicellular organisms with complex tissues, while Plantae includes multicellular plants that perform photosynthesis. Fungi are primarily multicellular decomposers, Protista consists of mostly unicellular organisms with diverse characteristics, and Monera includes unicellular prokaryotes like bacteria. This classification reflects increasing simplicity from complex multicellular forms to simpler unicellular organisms.
This may not help out to much, but really animals are not in archabacteria. Animals are in the kingdom Animalia. Archabacteria contains unicellular organisms that live in the most extreme enviorments.