A kingdom that includes the bacteria and blue-green algae in some classification schemes.
monera
Cyanobacteria is classified as monera, specifically within the kingdom Monera. They are prokaryotic organisms, lacking a true nucleus, and are commonly referred to as blue-green algae.
monera is a single-celled organism. it is very simple and small e.g. bacteria and cyanbacteria
No, an amoeba is not classified under the Monera kingdom. Amoebas belong to the Protista kingdom. Monera is a traditional kingdom that includes bacteria and archaea.
Plantae, Animalia, Fungi, Protista and Monera. However this system of classification was invented in 1969 and so is not as commonly used anymore.
The monera is a part of the kingdom that has unicellular organisms. Monera also belongs to the Vermes of the Animalia class.
monera
Monera Kingdom
Cyanobacteria is classified as monera, specifically within the kingdom Monera. They are prokaryotic organisms, lacking a true nucleus, and are commonly referred to as blue-green algae.
monera is part of the kingdoms i think it is unicellur and prokaryotic
is the monera the name of biological kingdom
protists have a nucleus and monera don't
1
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Monera is an outdated biological classification for unicellular organisms like bacteria. In a sentence: "Scientists used to categorize bacteria and other unicellular organisms under the kingdom Monera."
yes Monera and protists is a living organism
monera reproduce asexually with the help of binary fission