Plants, fungi and animals are eukaryotic. Bacteria are prokaryotic. Prokaryotes lack nuclear membranes and organelles.
Two types of living things can be generalized to prokaryotes (which are bacteria and archae) and eukaryotes (which are animals, plants, protists, and fungi).
decomposes break down the remains of dead plants and animals.
You won't find a cell wall in animal organisms. In animals, there only exists a cell membrane. Cells are usually microscopic.
Hydrobionts are different living organisms (animals, plants, bacteria) which live in water.
"All living things reproduce" are one of the characteristics that define what is living and what is non-living. Plants and animals reproduce along with bacteria, fungi and protists.
The 5 Kingdoms are: Fungi, Plants, Animals, Prokaryotes and Protoctistans.
Prokaryotes. Eukaryotes have nucleated cells, and include Fungi, Protists, Plants, and Animals. Prokaryotes do not have nuclei, they are the Bacteria and Archaea
i imagine you mean plants and animals, however you may mean eukaryotes (animals plants and larger single celled organisms like amoeba) and prokaryotes (bacteria).
i imagine you mean plants and animals, however you may mean eukaryotes (animals plants and larger single celled organisms like amoeba) and prokaryotes (bacteria).
Elodea is a Eukaryote. Prokaryotic consists of bacteria whereas Eukaryotes are plants and animals. Eukaryotes have a nucleas, Prokaryotes do not.
Yeast is a fungi, therefore eukaryotic. Eukaryotes are plants, animals and fungi. Prokaryotes are bacteria and archaea.
bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea bacteria and archaea
prokaryotes (which are bacteria and archaea) and eukaryotes (which are animals, plants, protists, and fungi). hope this helps
Plants are eukaryotic. The only prokaryotes are in the domains Archaea and Bacteria.
prokaryotes (which are bacteria and archaea) and eukaryotes (which are animals, plants, protists, and fungi). hope this helps
Eukarya. Eukaryotic organisms have cells with a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles, distinguishing them from prokaryotes like bacteria and archaea. Eukarya includes plants, animals, fungi, and protists.
No. Bacteria are classified as prokaryotic. Eukaryotes have differing traits from prokaryotes - most notably they have nuclei where prokaryotes do not have nuclei. Viruses are classified as neither prokaryotic or eukaryotic but are considered to be living organisms as well.