Biology, asked by koppikarradhika, 5 months ago

what are monera?
what are protist?

Answers

Answered by tiwarishashwat125
1

Answer:

Monera. [ (muh-neer-uh) (or Prokaryotae) ] The kingdom of single-celled organisms without a cell nucleus (see also prokaryotes). Monera are the most primitive living things and are thought to have been the first to evolve.

The simplest definition is that protists are all the eukaryotic organisms that are not animals, plants or fungi," said Alastair Simpson, a professor in the department of biology at Dalhousie University. ... He further explained that there are examples of multicellular protists among brown algae and certain red algae.

Answered by upyoddha43
0

Monera is a kingdom that contains unicellular organisms with a prokaryotic cell organization, such as bacteria. They are single-celled organisms with no true nuclear membrane. The taxon Monera was first proposed as a phylum by Ernst Haeckel in 1866.

Protists are a diverse collection of organisms. While exceptions exist, they are primarily microscopic and unicellular, or made up of a single cell. ... At one time, simple organisms such as amoebas and single-celled algae were classified together in a single taxonomic category: the kingdom Protista

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