-
initially classified as bacteria,
receiving the name
archaebacteria (/ˌɑːrkibækˈtɪəriə/, in the
Archaebacteria kingdom), but this term has
fallen out of use...
-
system of six
kingdoms (Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea/
Archaebacteria, and
Bacteria or Eubacteria),
while textbooks in
other parts of the...
- similarities,
Archaea and
Bacteria were
classified together and
called "
archaebacteria". However,
scientists now know that
these two
domains are
hardly similar...
-
signature sequences: A
reappraisal of
evolutionary relationships among archaebacteria, eubacteria, and eukaryotes". Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 62 (4): 1435–91...
- a
single membrane (monoderm),
including gram-positive
bacteria and
archaebacteria, and
those with an
inner and
outer cell
membrane (diderm), including...
-
bacteria can be
divided into two
major subkingdoms:
Eubacteria and
Archaebacteria.
Eubacteria include the only
bacteria that
contain chlorophyll a. Not...
- into two domains:
Bacteria (formerly Eubacteria) and
Archaea (formerly
Archaebacteria).
Organisms with
nuclei are
placed in a
third domain: Eukaryota. Prokaryotes...
-
signature sequences: A
reappraisal of
evolutionary relationships among archaebacteria,
eubacteria and eukaryotes".
Microbiology and
Molecular Biology Reviews...
- five-kingdom
classification is the
splitting of
Archaea (previously
named "
archaebacteria") from
Bacteria as
completely different organisms. It has been challenged...
-
eubacteria (true bacteria) and
archaebacteria (archaea). In 1977 Carl
Woese and
George E. Fox
established that
archaebacteria (methanogens in
their case)...