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Topic: Superkingdom


In the News (Tue 2 Dec 08)

  
  All Living Things, in Seven Kingdoms
Superkingdom Progenotes*.....first cells Superkingdom Archaebacteriae Kingdom Protomonera.......archaic bacteria Superkingdom Eubacteria Kingdom Monera............bacteria Superkingdom Urkaryotes* Superkingdom Eukaryotes......cells with nuclei Kingdom Protista..........protozoans Kingdom Myxomycophyta.....slime molds Kingdom Plantae............plants Kingdom Fungi..............fungi Kingdom Animalia...........animals
The idea of the Superkingdoms is intended to represent this, with two extinct Superkingdoms for transitional forms that now no longer exist.
The Superkingdoms are thus based on the stages in the evolution of structure of the cell.
www.friesian.com /life-1.htm   (2374 words)

  
 BAEblast_hg Help: Overview   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The creation of the Pathogenomics database was motivated by the interest of finding proteins in our probe organisms that are more similar to other superkingdoms than the probe organism's own superkingdom.
The latter is needed to sort the proteins in superkingdom groups, as well as relative groups (for example proteins that belong to same family as E. Coli).
The relative information is needed so that relatives may be excluded when searching for the most similar protein in the superkingdom of interest.
www.pathogenomics.bc.ca /help/BAEblast_help/BAEblast_overview.html   (536 words)

  
 madaaa   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Eukaryotes formed through the merger of prokaryotes, which predate them in the fossil record by some 2 billion years.In a recently proposed system they are called the eukarya and classified as an overarching group (domain) above the kingdom level.
All multicelled organisms are eukaryotes, as is one superkingdom of single-celled organisms.
They include the animals,pants,and fungi, which are mostly multicellular, as well as the kingdom of the protists, many of which are unicellular.Eukaryotes are thought to share a common origin, and are often treated formally as a superkingdom, empire, or domain.
madaaa.blogspot.com /2005/10/eukaryote-eukaryote-cell-or-organism.html   (433 words)

  
 forams
Such organisms are classified in the Superkingdom of Protists or Protista.
Other eukaryotic superkingdoms include animals, plants, and fungi (mushrooms).
Prokaryotic organisms include various types of bacteria, and are subdivided into the two large groups Bacteria and Archaea (both of which have been called 'bacteria' in the past).
ethomas.web.wesleyan.edu /ees123/forams.htm   (812 words)

  
 Glossary of Terms
The superkingdom containing all organisms that are, or consist of, cells with true nuclei bounded by nuclear envelopes and that undergo meiosis.
The superkingdom contains four kingdoms: the Protoctista, the Fungi, the Animalia, and the Plantae.
The superkingdom containing all microorganisms that lack a membrane-bound nucleas containing chromosomes.
www.compassgenomics.com:16080 /glossary.shtml   (1021 words)

  
 Classification of Living Things
Note that what was previously called blue green algae are now classified as cyanobacteria because they are prokaryotes.
Since they are so different from all other life, under the five kingdom system, Bacteria also comprise the Superkingdom Prokarya.
The cells of life forms in the other four kingdoms are classified as "eukaryotes" and have a nucleus in which the genetic material is organized on "chromosomes" within a cellular nucleus.
www.microscopy-uk.org.uk /mag/artmay98/classif.html   (1906 words)

  
 [No title]
The latter was needed to sor t the proteins in superkingdom groups, as well as relative groups (for example proteins that belong to same family as E. Coli).
The relative information was needed so that relatives could be excluded when searching for the most similar protein in the super kingdom of interest.
\par \pard\plain \s1\f1\fs20 \par \pard\plain \s1\f1\fs20\li60\ri0\fi518\b do_all_analysis_e_hg -s specfile (-e) -h hitsuperkingdom -d directory \par \pard\plain \s1\f1\fs20\li57\ri0\fi196 \par where -s and -e is as above and -h is the superkingdom that we are searching for hits in.
www.pathogenomics.bc.ca /help/BAEblast_help/docs/hans_blastdoc.rtf   (1534 words)

  
 Obesity alters gut microbial ecology.
We have analyzed 5,088 bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences from the distal intestinal (cecal) microbiota of genetically obese ob/ob mice, lean ob/+ and wild-type siblings, and their ob/+ mothers, all fed the same polysaccharide-rich diet.
Although the majority of mouse gut species are unique, the mouse and human microbiota(s) are similar at the division (superkingdom) level, with Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes dominating.
However, compared with lean mice and regardless of kinship, ob/ob animals have a 50% reduction in the abundance of Bacteroidetes and a proportional increase in Firmicutes.
obesity.researchtoday.net /archive/2/8/204.htm   (241 words)

  
 [No title]
I have tried to incorporate recent discoveries of new taxa into this system, and have attempted to retain the modified Linnean hierarchal system--Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, etc.--as well as attaching the prefices super and sub as required.
The taxonomic units of superkingdom are synonymous herein with domain.
A few exceptions to the classical Linnean system have been included in this work.
geology.csusb.edu /360/biotax31.htm   (3152 words)

  
 Classification, Laboratory Notes for BIO 1003   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The system of binomial nomenclature was introduced by Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) in Species plantarum (1753) and Systema naturae, 10th edition (1758), and these two works are used as the stating points for botanical and zoological nomenclature.
A classification is hierarchical with superkingdoms being the largest groups and subspecies the smallest.
Each category may contain many subcategories of the next lower level.
darwin.baruch.cuny.edu /bio1003/classification.html   (374 words)

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