Taxonomy and Classification
What are multicellular eukaryotes that have cell walls and are heterotrophic?
Fungi
Kingdom Animalia examples
fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and mammals including humans
Kingdom Fungi examples
molds, mildews, mushrooms, and yeast
Kingdom Plantae examples
mosses, ferns, flowering plants
Kingdom Archaebacteria
unicellular, asexual reproduction, cell wall, prokaryotic, some autotroph some heterotroph, many live in harsh environments (sulfurous hot springs or very salty lakes), motile.
Kingdom Eubacteria
unicellular, prokaryotic, autotrophs and heterotrophs, asexual reproduction, motile.
What are multicellular eukaryotes that have cell walls and are autotrophic?
Plantae
Kingdom Protista
All eukaryotes that are not plant, animal, or fungi (50,000 species total). Species are placed here because of what they are NOT rather than what they are. Mostly unicellular and a few multicellular eukaryotes. May have a cell wall, can be autotroph or heterotroph, asexual or sexual reproduction. Includes Euglena and Amoebas.
What are multicellular eukaryotes that live all over the planet and consume food?
Animalia
What are unicellular prokaryotes that live in volcanic ash?
Archaebacteria
Organisms that belong to the same class must belong to the same-
Phylum and Kingdom
Kingdom Fungi
eukaryote, multicellular (except yeast), cell walls (chitin), asexual or sexual, decomposers of nature, sessile (except yeast)
Kingdom Plantae
eukaryote, multicellular, autotrophic, have cell walls, sessile, and asexual or sexual
Kingdom Archaebacteria examples
methanogens, halophiles, thermophiles
Kingdom Animalia
multicellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic, no cell walls, mostly motile
Kingdom Protista examples
slime mold, amoeba, euglena, dinoflagellete, paramecium, diatom, and macroalgae
What order does taxonomic rank go in?
Domain-Kingdom-Phylum-Class-Order-Family- Genus- Species
Kingdom Eubacteria examples
E. Coli., Staphylococcus, Streptococcus
What are unicellular prokaryotes that live in dust?
Eubacteria
What are unicellular eukaryotes that live in pond water?
Protists