-
Archaea (/ɑːrˈkiːə/ ar-KEE-ə) is a
domain of organisms. Traditionally,
Archaea only
included its
prokaryotic members, but this has
since been
found to...
-
Archaea is a
domain of single-celled organisms.
Archaea or
archea may also
refer to:
Archaea (spider), an
extinct genus of
Archaeidae Archaea (journal)...
- of
either three domains,
Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya, or two domains,
Archaea and Bacteria, with
Eukarya included in
Archaea. In the three-domain model...
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Promethearchaeati is a
kingdom belonging to the
domain Archaea that
contain eukaryotic signature proteins. It
appears that the eukaryotes, the domain...
-
classification system that
groups all
cellular life into
three domains,
namely Archaea,
Bacteria and Eukarya,
introduced by Carl Woese, Otto
Kandler and Mark...
- phylogenetics,
prokaryotes are
divided into two domains:
Bacteria and
Archaea. A
third domain, Eukaryota,
consists of
organisms with nuclei. Prokaryotes...
- Eukaryota.
Archaea are
further divided into
multiple recognized phyla.
Archaea and
bacteria are
generally similar in size and shape,
although a few
archaea have...
- the
Asgard archaea, and are
closely related to the Heimdallarchaeia. This
implies that
there are only two
domains of life,
Bacteria and
Archaea, with eukaryotes...
- are
classified into two domains,
Bacteria and
Archaea. It
emerged from
development of
knowledge of
archaea diversity and
challenges the
widely accepted...
- have used a
system of six
kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista,
Archaea/Archaebacteria, and
Bacteria or Eubacteria),
while textbooks in
other parts...