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Archeobactetia
horsetails belong to the Equisetopsida division.
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
No, a carnation is not a fern. Carnations belong to the genus Dianthus in the Caryophyllaceae family, while ferns belong to the division Pteridophyta and reproduce via spores. They have different reproductive structures and evolutionary histories.
No, bees are not prokaryotes. Bees are multicellular eukaryotic organisms that belong to the kingdom Animalia. Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that lack a distinct nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
Archeobactetia
they belong to class prokaryotes...
horsetails belong to the Equisetopsida division.
Viruses are prokaryotes and not Eukaryotes. Therefore they are not alive. Since it is not considered to be alive they do not belong in the 5 kingdom classification; Monera, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia, Protista. Bacteria are living once celled organisms and belong to either bacteria or Archaea. *Viruses not considered alive because they need a host to be able to reproduce. They cannot reproduce on their own.
eukaryotic
Butterflies belong to the kingdom Animalia, as they are multicellular organisms that are capable of movement, ingest food, and usually reproduce sexually.
What division of science is physics is belong?
Division Anthocerotophyta: Hornworts Division Bryophyta: Mosses Division Lycophyta: Club Mosses; Scale Trees Division Hepaticophyta: Liverworts Division Pteridopsida: Ferns Division Tracheophyta: Vascular Plants (Largest Division) Division Sphenopsida: Horsetails
The largest division that a group of organisms can belong to is a domain.
The largest division that a group of organisms can belong to is a domain.
No, protista are eukaryote. Prokaryotes are broken into two kingdoms. Archeabacteria ( ancient bacteria ) and Eubacteria ( true bacteria )
No, a carnation is not a fern. Carnations belong to the genus Dianthus in the Caryophyllaceae family, while ferns belong to the division Pteridophyta and reproduce via spores. They have different reproductive structures and evolutionary histories.