Most commonly these are listed as Kingdom Bacteria, but it really depends on who is doing the taxonomy. from the Wikipedia is a better explaination than I could do. It reads "Currently, many textbooks from the United States use a system of six kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, Bacteria) while British and Australian textbooks may describe five kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, and Prokaryota or Monera)." Under the British/Australian system they would fit into Prokaryota.
Bacteria
Monera used to be the Kingdom classification for bacteria
Amoeba IS an one celled animal. Bacteria is NOT an animal.
protocista are eukaryotic organisms which are not included elsweher where as prokaryotes are things like bacteria and cyanobacteria
Eukarya As Well As _Plant _Animal _Protist _Fungi
Bacteria is a member of the (Archaebacteria and Eubacteria) member because their used to be 5 kingdoms, so the scientist realized that there was 2 different kingdoms so they decided to make another one which was the 6 kingdom.The 5 kingdom was called Monera.
members of the plant kingdom are multicellular
Kingdom Gram-Positive Bacteria is a kingdom within the domain Bacteria.
Kingdom Bacteria
No. Bacteria have their own kingdom.
Bacteria kingdom
The kingdom that streptococcus belongs to is Bacteria. Streptococcus is also a member of the phylum Firmicutes and is gram positive.
Of the 5 kingdoms, bacteria belong to Kingdom Monera. Sometimes thisis simply knownas Kingdom Bacteria.
The Monera Kingdom contains the true bacteria.
Decomposer bacteria is in the kingdom Eubacteria.
Bacterias are in the kingdom of bacteria. They are categorized as either archaebacteria or eubacteria.
The kingdom is Bacteria.