3. Introduction
• The earth living things are divided by some
groups that are in a especific order. The 5
kingdom system consists of protists, bacteria,
animal, plant and fungi.
• This kingdoms are part of the evolutive earth´s
nature, that is so important for our planet
because it help us to clasificate the organisms.
4. Kingdoms
• Organisms are classified into three Domains
and into one of six Kingdoms of life. These
Kingdoms are Archaebacteria, Eubacteria,
Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.
5. Animalia
• The animal kingdom is the
largest kingdom with over 1
million known species.
• All animals consist of many
complex cells. They are also
heterotrophs.
• Members of the animal
kingdom are found in the
most diverse environments in
the world.
7. Plantae
• are probably quite familiar with the members
of this kingdom as it contains all the plants
that you have come to know - flowering
plants, mosses, and ferns. Plants are all
multicellular and consist of complex cells.
• With over 250,000 species, the plant kingdom
is the second largest kingdom.
9. Fungi
• Mushrooms, mold and mildew are all examples of
organisms in the kingdom fungi.
• Most fungi are multicellular and consists of many
complex cells.
• Fungi are organisms that biologists once confused
with plants, however, unlike plants, fungi cannot
make their own food. Most obtain their food
from parts of plants that are decaying in the soil.
•
11. Protists
• Slime molds and algae are protists.
• Sometimes they are called the odds and ends
kingdom because its members are so different
from one another. Protists include all
microscopic organisms that are not bacteria,
not animals, not plants and not fungi.
•
12. Monera
• is a kingdom that contains unicellular organisms
with a prokaryotic cell organization, (having no
nuclear membrane), such as bacteria.
• Under the three-domain system of taxonomy,
introduced by Carl Woese in 1977, which reflects
the evolutionary history of life, the organisms
found in kingdom Monera have been divided into
two domains, Archaea and Bacteria