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Monera is an outdated biological classification for unicellular organisms like bacteria. In a sentence: "Scientists used to categorize bacteria and other unicellular organisms under the kingdom Monera."
Yes, Monera have a cell wall. The cell wall in Monera is typically made of peptidoglycan, a unique compound that provides structure and support to the cell.
Yes, most monera are microscopic, consisting of bacteria and archaea that are too small to be seen with the naked eye. Monera also include some larger bacteria-like organisms, but the majority are indeed microscopic.
Monera used to be the kingdom for all prokaryotes. Now that prokaryotes are divided into two domains (Archaea and Bacteria), there is no more kingdom Monera. In essence, species once belonging to the kingdom Monera were divided into the two domains.
monera
Monera Kingdom
monera is part of the kingdoms i think it is unicellur and prokaryotic
Cyanobacteria is classified as monera, specifically within the kingdom Monera. They are prokaryotic organisms, lacking a true nucleus, and are commonly referred to as blue-green algae.
protists have a nucleus and monera don't
is the monera the name of biological kingdom
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monera reproduce asexually with the help of binary fission
yes Monera and protists is a living organism
there are about 10,000 species in the monera kingdom.
Monera is an outdated biological classification for unicellular organisms like bacteria. In a sentence: "Scientists used to categorize bacteria and other unicellular organisms under the kingdom Monera."