2. ARISTOTLE DIVIDED LIVING THINGS INTO TWO KINGDOMS CAROLLUS LINNAEUS DEVELOPED THE CLASSIFICATION ON SIMILAR PROPERTIES, FOUND BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE AS A SYSTEM TO GIVE A SCIENTIFIC NAME ROBERT WHITTAKER THE CONSIDERED FIVE KINGDOMS SYSTEM
3. THE ARISTOTLE’S SYSTEM OF CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING THINGS HAD BEEN USED FOR YEARS SINCE ABOUT 200 YEARS AGO
4. K ing-- P hillip-- C ame-- O ver-- F or-- G ood-- S oup The mnemonic device to help you remember the complete hierarchy
5. Prokaryotic Cells Without Nuclei And Membrane-Bound Organelles 1. Kingdom Monera [10,000 species]: Unicellular and colonial--including the true bacteria (eubacteria) and cyanobacteria (blue-green algae). Eukaryotic Cells With Nuclei And Membrane-Bound Organelles: 2. Kingdom Protista (Protoctista) [250,000 species]: Unicellular protozoans and unicellular & multicellular (macroscopic) algae with 9 + 2 cilia and flagella (called undulipodia). 3. Kingdom Fungi [100,000 species]: Haploid and dikaryotic (binucleate) cells, multicellular, generally heterotrophic, without cilia and eukaryotic (9 + 2) flagella (undulipodia). 4. Kingdom Plantae [250,000 species]: Haplo-diploid life cycles, mostly autotrophic, retaining embryo within female sex organ on parent plant. 5. Kingdom Animalia [1,000,000 species]: Multicellular animals, without cell walls and without photosynthetic pigments, forming diploid blastula .
6. In biology , binomial nomenclature is how species are named. As the word "binomial" suggests, the name of a species is made by using two words: the genus name and the species description. Binomial nomenclature means "two-name description". Kingdom Fungi Plantae Phylum Eumycota Tracheophyta Class Ascomycetes Angiospermae Order Pyrenulales Arales Family Verrucariaceae Lemnaceae Genus Verrucaria Wolffia Species Maura borealis