Animalia is an incredibly diverse kingdom, and there is no specific life cycle pattern. According to Cavalier-Smith (1998), there are six kingdoms: Bacteria, Protozoa, Chromista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia. You'll have to look at individual subgroups within Animalia (e.g. sub-phyla) to get any sense of specificity. read more
Animalia is an incredibly diverse kingdom, and there is no specific life cycle pattern. According to Cavalier-Smith (1998), there are six kingdoms: Bacteria, Protozoa, Chromista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia. You'll have to look at individual subgroups within Animalia (e.g. sub-phyla) to get any sense of specificity. read more
Human beings (Homo sapiens) are among of the more than 1 million species that compose kingdom Animalia, one of six taxonomic classifications of kingdoms of organisms on earth. Creatures of kingdom Animalia fall into one of the nine major phyla, or subgroups, and range from dogs to spiders to jellyfish. read more
The kingdom Animalia, or Metazoa, includes all animals. Animals are multicellular, eukaryotic organisms, which are heterotrophic, meaning they obtain nutrition from organic sources. Most animals obtain nutrition by ingesting other organisms or decomposing organic material. read more