Are organisms that are found in kingdom fungi eukaryotic or prokaryotic
They have nuclei.
my life science teacher would always say that YOU have eukratic cells. if memory serves.
The different kingdoms are plants, animals, fungi, protists, and monerans. What are the differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic? They are both a type of cell - the differences involved what type of organelles (if any) they each have, how and what they are composed of, and if they can be unicellular (one cell) or multi-cellular (more than one cell) in organisms. We (humans), or Homo sapiens, fall under the kingdom animal. We are multi-cellular, eukaryotic organisms. Bacteria, on the other hand, are prokaryotes. Protists can be either. Plants are eukaryotic. So what about Fungi (your original question?) If you are still confused try this link - your answer is in the text! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryote
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Kingdom Fungi comprises the fungi, such as mushrooms, molds, and yeasts, eukaryotic heterotrophs that digest food outside of their bodies. Most fungi are multicellular, but some, the yeasts, are simple unicellular organisms probably evolved from multicellular ancestors. http://classic.sidwell.edu/us/science/vlb5/Labs/Classification_Lab/Eukarya/Fungi/
Ecologist Robert H. Whittaker developed a five-kingdom system that placed prokaryotes in the kingdom Monera, and organisms with eukaryotic cells were divided into four other kingdoms (Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia).
The monera and all that stuff is essentially dead. There are single celled fungi (chytrids) that do not have multicellular ancestors.
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