Most eubacteria are helpful. Some produce vitamins and foods like yogurt. However, these eubacteria, Streptococci pictured above, can give you strep throat!


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Mushrooms, mold and mildew are all examples of organisms in the kingdom fungi. Most fungi are multicellular and consists of many complex cells.


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Fun Facts about Fungi. Some fungi taste great and others can kill you! Fungi are organisms that biologists once confused with plants, however, unlike plants, fungi cannot make their own food. Most obtain their food from parts of plants that are decaying in the soil. Slime molds and algae are protists. Sometimes they are called the odds and ends kingdom because its members are so different from one another. Protists include all microscopic organisms that are not bacteria, not animals, not plants and not fungi.

Most protists are unicellular. You may be wondering why those protists are not classified in the Archaebacteria or Eubacteria kingdoms. It is because, unlike bacteria, protists are complex cells.


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These delicate looking diatoms are classified in the protist kingdom. The Six Kingdoms When Linnaeus developed his system of classification, there were only two kingdoms, Plants and Animals. Animals The animal kingdom is the largest kingdom with over 1 million known species. Eubacteria Like archaebacteria, eubacteria are complex and single celled.

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Fungi Mushrooms, mold and mildew are all examples of organisms in the kingdom fungi. Protists Slime molds and algae are protists. Plants You are probably quite familiar with the members of this kingdom as it contains all the plants that you have come to know - flowering plants , mosses, and ferns. There is usually no cell wall, although some forms may have a cell wall.

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They have organelles including a nucleus and may have chloroplasts, so some will be green and others won't be. They are small, although many are big enough to be recognized in a dissecting microscope or even with a magnifying glass. Nutrients are acquired by photosynthesis, ingestion of other organisms, or both. Fungi Fungi are multicellular,with a cell wall, organelles including a nucleus, but no chloroplasts. They have no mechanisms for locomotion.

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Fungi range in size from microscopic to very large such as mushrooms. Nutrients are acquired by absorption. For the most part, fungi acquire nutrients from decaying material. Plantae Plants are multicellular and most don't move, although gametes of some plants move using cilia or flagella. Organelles including nucleus, chloroplasts are present, and cell walls are present. Nutrients are acquired by photosynthesis they all require sunlight.

Animalia Animals are multicellular, and move with the aid of cilia, flagella, or muscular organs based on contractile proteins. They have organelles including a nucleus, but no chloroplasts or cell walls. Animals acquire nutrients by ingestion. Copyright and Intended Use Visitors: Five Kingdom Classification System Once upon a time, all living things were lumped together into two kingdoms, namely plants and animals at least, that's how I learned it. A "mini-key" to the five kingdoms Suppose you see something in freshwater that certainly appears to be living.

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How can you begin to determine what it is? Here is a key not quite perfect that you might use to help determine the kingdom to which it belongs. Is it green or does it have green parts? Could be a plant or a protist, or blue-green bacteria. Make sure that the green is really part of the organism, though.

Five Kingdom Classification System

An animal might have eaten something green, for example. Look for cell walls, internal structure. In the compound microscope you might be able to see chloroplasts. Could be a moneran bacteria , protist, fungus, or animal. Single-celled - go to 4 Multicellular Look for complex or branching structure, appendages - go to 5 4.

Could be a moneran or a protist.

Kingdom (biology)

Can you see any detail inside the cell? Movement should be present, using cilia, flagella, or amoeboid motion. Cilia or flagella may be difficult to see. Should be quite small. May be shaped like short dashes rods , small dots cocci , or curved or spiral shaped. The largest them that is commonly found in freshwater is called Spirillum volutans.