Classification
Kingdoms of Life
Animal Body Plans
Vertebrates
Up for Grabs
100

Organisms are classified and placed into kingdoms based on

characteristics

100

This kingdom includes multicellular organisms that perform photosynthesis and have cell walls made of cellulose.

plantae

100

The simplest animals that cannot move and filter feed in water; they lack tissues and true organs.

Sponges

100

Warm-blooded animals with feathers and wings.


Birds

100

Animals are divided into these two categories.

Invertebrates and Vertebrates

200

The number of Kingdoms.

six

200

This kingdom contains mainly single-celled prokaryotes with peptidoglycan in their cell walls and is often called "true bacteria."

Eubacteria (Bacteria)

200

Animals with radial symmetry and many have an internal skeleton with spines (e.g., sea stars).

Echinoderms

200

Aquatic animals that breathe through gills and usually have scales.

Fish

200

The kingdom that must consume food (ingest or absorb) to obtain energy rather than producing it via photosynthesis.


Animalia

300

The number of Domains

Three

300

This kingdom includes organisms like amoebas and large single-celled algae — often the most complex single-celled organisms.

 Protista

300

Soft-bodied animals with a muscular foot; many have shells (e.g., snails, clams).

Molluscs

300

Cold-blooded vertebrates that typically have scaly skin and lay shelled eggs on land.


Reptiles

300

E. Coli belongs to this Kingdom

Bacteria

400

This Domain contains extremophiles

Archaea

400

This kingdom contains decomposers that absorb nutrients from other organisms and have cell walls made of chitin.


Fungi

400

Animals with stinging tentacles and a simple body plan (examples: jellyfish, sea anemones).

Cnidarians

400

Vertebrates that can breathe through their skin at certain life stages and usually have aquatic larval forms.


Amphibians

400

A term used to describe organisms that can make their own food.

Producers

500

The kingdom that includes organisms that are multicellular, heterotrophic, and lack cell walls.

Animalia

500

Archaebacteria are commonly found in these types of environments (think high heat, high salt, or low oxygen).

Harsh environments (extreme environments)

500

Animals with an external skeleton and segmented bodies (examples: insects, crustaceans).

Arthropods

500

Warm-blooded vertebrates that produce milk for their young and usually have hair or fur.

Mammals

500

These two Kingdoms cantain organisms that lack a nucleus.

Archaebacteria and Bacteria

1000

What is the largest Protist on Earth?

Giant Kelp