The Six Kingdom Classification: Part 2, Protista, Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, & Domains
Presents a brief history of what new information caused the classification of living things to evolve from the original two kingdom classification of animals and plants by Linnaeus in the 18th century to the present-day six kingdoms: Animal, Plant, Fungi, Protista, Eubacteria, and Archaebacteria. Discusses three of the six kingdoms: Protista, Eubacteria, and Archaebacteria. Also, presents the hierarchical classification from kingdom to species. Because viruses do not have the capability of an independent cellular life, they are included in neither the kingdom nor domain classifications.
(Source: DCMP)
Metadata
- Subject:
- Animal Sciences - Science
- Keywords:
- biology, invertebrates, kingdoms, plants
Files 1
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The Six Kingdom Classification: Part 2, Protista, Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, & Domains
- Type:
- Video
- Format:
- Streaming
- Accommodations:
- English Audio Descriptions - Visual, English Captions - Auditory
- Languages:
- English
- License:
- DCMP Membership
- Author:
- Benchmark Media
- Length:
- 20 minutes