di ko alam kaya nga nagtatanong eh?
The phylum Arthropoda is not one of the major phyla of animallike protists. Arthropoda belongs to the animal kingdom and includes insects, spiders, and crustaceans, while animallike protists are members of the protist kingdom.
The four Phyla of Protozoans are Sarcomastigophora, Apicomplexa, Ciliophora, and Microspora.
Archaebacteria are classified into four main phyla: Euryarchaeota, Crenarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota, and Korarchaeota. These phyla are further divided into various classes, orders, families, and genera based on their genetic and physiological characteristics.
The four types of eukaryotic cells are animal cells, plant cells, fungal cells, and protist cells. Each type of cell has unique structures and functions that distinguish them from one another.
The four characteristics used to decide what organisms belong in which kingdom are cell type (prokaryotic or eukaryotic), cell structure (unicellular or multicellular), mode of nutrition (autotrophic or heterotrophic), and reproduction method (asexual or sexual).
The phylum Arthropoda is not one of the major phyla of animallike protists. Arthropoda belongs to the animal kingdom and includes insects, spiders, and crustaceans, while animallike protists are members of the protist kingdom.
The four Phyla of Protozoans are Sarcomastigophora, Apicomplexa, Ciliophora, and Microspora.
it is lol
by their method of mobility
The four major phyla of protozoa are Sarcomastigophora (includes flagellates and amoebas), Ciliophora (ciliates), Apicomplexa (parasites like Plasmodium), and Microspora (intracellular parasites). Each phylum includes a diverse range of species with varying characteristics and lifestyles.
Archaebacteria are classified into four main phyla: Euryarchaeota, Crenarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota, and Korarchaeota. These phyla are further divided into various classes, orders, families, and genera based on their genetic and physiological characteristics.
four phyla: euglenophytes, chrysophytes, diatoms, dinoflagellates Euglena live in water have 2 flagella for movement use chlorplasts for photosynthesis, but can turn into heterotrophs if they are kept in the dark has an eyespot used for sensing light and dark pellicle - like a cell wall, helps maintain their shapes Chrysophytes yellow-green algae, "golden plants" Diatoms produce thin cell walls of silicon, main component of glass Dinoflagellates Often have two flagella luminescent
The four main phyla of the plant kingdom are: 1) Bryophyta (mosses), 2) Pteridophyta (ferns), 3) Coniferophyta (conifers), and 4) Angiospermophyta (flowering plants). Each phylum represents a distinct group of plants with unique characteristics and reproductive structures.
There is no single kingdom that is unicellular. All prokaryotes (organisms with no cell nucleus) are unicellular, and they belong to two domains, bacteria and archaea. Eukaryotes, or organisms with a cell nucleus, are divided into four kingdoms, plants, fungi, animals, and protists (although recently scientists began to reclassify protists into multiple separate kingdoms). In each of the fungi and protist kingdoms, there are a variety of members that are unicellular, and also some members that are multicellular. Animals and plants are always multicellular (except possibly one animal group called Myxozoa).
Monera is the kingdom that includes most organisms that have a prokaryotic cell. The four phyla in this kingdom are: Archaebacteria, Schizopyta, Cyanophyta and Prochlorophyta. Bacteria are in the Schizophyta phylum.
The four types of eukaryotic cells are animal cells, plant cells, fungal cells, and protist cells. Each type of cell has unique structures and functions that distinguish them from one another.
The four characteristics used to decide what organisms belong in which kingdom are cell type (prokaryotic or eukaryotic), cell structure (unicellular or multicellular), mode of nutrition (autotrophic or heterotrophic), and reproduction method (asexual or sexual).