eukaryotic and archabacterial
Not usually. There is a group called cyanobacteria which do. They are also called blue-green algae. But all the others are consumers and do not make their own food.
Archaea and bacteria are classified into separate kingdoms due to significant differences in their cellular structure, genetics, and biochemistry. Archaea have unique membrane lipids, distinct ribosomal RNA sequences, and different metabolic pathways compared to bacteria. Additionally, archaea often inhabit extreme environments and exhibit features more akin to eukaryotes in certain aspects, such as their transcription and translation processes. These fundamental differences justify their classification into separate domains: Archaea and Bacteria.
What Kingdom is similar to Kingdom Protista
The Kingdom Animalia, the animal kingdom
There are five kingdoms of organisms in the world. They are kingdom Animalia, kingdom plantae, kingdom Protista, kingdom fungi, and kingdom monera.
Bacteria is a kingdom. It has many phylums within the kingdom.
stops the bactera
All but flue
Bacteria is the plural; bacterium is the singular.
bacilli cocci spirilli
Bacteria live everywhere, especially moist places.
Yes, bacteria are living organisms they are part of the 6 kingdoms
These bactera are: Streptobaccilus moniliformis and Spirillum minus.
no...what some animals get is called specaueous cysts they look like pimples...but they are not
uhm the good bactera is the stuff they use to make cheese and milk and then there's the stuff they put in shots
Not usually. There is a group called cyanobacteria which do. They are also called blue-green algae. But all the others are consumers and do not make their own food.
The bacteria in the ocean and sea are called plankton. The most commonly known animal is the whale, but shrimp, some crabs and small fish also do.