Plants and fungi are examples of sessile kingdoms, as they are organisms that are rooted in place and do not move from where they are anchored. They rely on external means, such as wind or animals, for seed dispersal.
No, an organism can only belong to one kingdom in the classification system. Organisms are classified into kingdoms based on their most prominent characteristics and evolutionary relationships.
Chloroplasts are found in the Kingdom Plantae, which includes plants, algae, and some species of protists. They are the site of photosynthesis in these organisms, where they convert light energy into chemical energy to produce glucose and oxygen.
One of two Kingdoms: Animalia and Plantae.
The three domains of life are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. The kingdoms within these domains are Bacteria (includes kingdoms such as Eubacteria), Archaea (includes kingdom Archaea), and Eukarya (includes kingdoms such as Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia).
Eubacteria and Archaebacteria
false
They are a moving, eukaryotic organism.
All of them.
snowshoe hare
Protists
the 6 kingdoms are jamacia carribean england antigua france asia
Organisms are placed into domains and kingdoms based on their cell type ,their ability to make food ,and the number of cells in their bodies
The swordfish can swim up to 69mph.
Gravel is not an organism, it is not alive, thus it does not belong to any of the kingdoms of LIFE.
i just really want to know this answer but,nobody knows it =( losers ha!
The eukaryotic unicellular organism could belong to either the Protista or Fungi kingdom. Further classification would require additional characteristics to distinguish between the two kingdoms.