Amoeba, kelp, and slime molds belong to the diverse kingdom known as Protista. This kingdom encompasses a wide variety of organisms, including single-celled eukaryotes like amoebas, multicellular forms like kelp (a type of brown algae), and various types of slime molds. Protists are characterized by their diverse modes of nutrition, reproduction, and cellular structures, differentiating them from plants, animals, and fungi.
Kelp, regardless of size are Botanica (Plant life) The Amoeba is a protozoan ( First or earliest form of animals) or are classed as Protists. Kelp are definitely plants. The Giant Amoeba is a time-tested science fiction device. The real ones are nowheres near the size of those in science-fiction accounts./The kingdom of Amoeba is Animaland for Kelp, the kingdom is Plantae
Sometimes (amoeba), sometimes not (kelp).
Giant kelp are neither animals nor plants. Giant kelp is in the Protista Kingdom.
Sometimes (amoeba), sometimes not (kelp).
Kelp is actually brown algae. Kelp is not a plant it is a protist from the kingdom Protista.
Well, fungi is a Kingdom, not a Phylum. But, no, kelp is made of algae and belongs in Kingdom Protista.
Examples of organisms belonging to the protista kingdom include algae, protozoa, and slime molds. Algae are photosynthetic organisms found in aquatic environments, protozoa are single-celled organisms that can be parasitic or free-living, and slime molds are fungus-like organisms that can move and behave like animals at some stages in their life cycle.
A: The kingdom that is single-celled is the protist kingdom. It is one of the five kingdoms of living things; plant, animal, protist, moneran, and fungi. An example of a protist is algae. Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, and FungiProtista and Fungi
Seaweed is a type of algae, not slime mold. Algae are simple photosynthetic organisms that can be found in various aquatic environments, while slime molds are unrelated organisms that belong to the group of protists. Seaweed, specifically, refers to larger, multicellular forms of algae, such as kelp and red algae.
Yes, kelp is eukaryotic. It belongs to the kingdom Protista, specifically within the group of organisms known as brown algae. Eukaryotic cells have a defined nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, which are characteristic features of kelp and other algae.
kelp,kelp,kelp,kelp,kelp,kelp,kelp,kelp,and most importantly....... Drum roll please!!!........KELP
Kelp does not eat, it is a plant, a producer. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Sunlight. It's a plant, not an animal. Kelp do not eat sunlight, and kelp is NOT a plant. Kelp makes its own food by a process called photosynthesis. Kelp is a protist from the kingdom of Protista, it is not a plant Good grief - kelp is a seaweed, not a protist. It is one of the brown algae, and indeed uses sunlight as the energy source to make its own food. Actually, it is a protist and it gets nutrients from photosynthesis. Yep, kelps are seaweeds, but they are actually from the Kingdom Protista (i.e. protists). They belong to the Class Phaeophyceae which are protists, not plants (although clearly, they are plant like). And yes, they photosynthesise.