Biology, asked by yaahashwinikc, 7 months ago

How Monera is prokaryotic

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Answered by humera85
1

Answer:

Monera is prokaryotic because it is single celled organism and also not having true nucleus.

Answered by RADJKRISHNA
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Answer:

Monera is a kingdom in biology that comprises prokaryotes, which are single-celled organism that have no true nucleus. Since monerans are prokaryotes, such as bacteria, they have no membrane-bound organelles.

a taxonomic kingdom of prokaryotic organisms that typically reproduce by asexual budding or fission and have a nutritional mode of absorption, photosynthesis, or chemosynthesis, comprising the bacteria, blue-green algae, and various primitive pathogens.

Kingdom Monera is classified into three sub-kingdoms- Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, and Cyanobacteria.

Monera is a kingdom in biology that comprises prokaryotes, which are single-celled organism that have no true nucleus. Monera is the most ancient group of organisms on earth, as well as the most numerous. In this kingdom, the organisms have naked DNA that forms a clump called the nucleoid, as shown below, while organisms in all other kingdoms have DNA enclosed in a nucleus. Since monerans are prokaryotes, such as bacteria, they have no membrane-bound organelles. They are also microscopic and usually live in moist environments. For example, we can find monerans within bodies of animals and plants, and in hot springs. Note that the term Monera is no longer used by many scientists, because they have found that the two groups that make up this kingdom, archaea and bacteria, aren’t as closely related as once thought. Rather, archaea are closer to eukaryotes than they are to bacteria

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