Importance of Monella a) Production of food: cheese, yogurt, vinegar, wine, sour cream etc. b) Industry: Clean oil, remove waste from water, synthesize drugs and chemical substances. Symbiosis: Sometimes called symbiosis, interdependence of different species. There are three main types of symbiosis, symbiosis, parasitism, symbiosis, depending on the specific relationship between the species involved. Symbiosis leading to interdependent biological mutual benefits is often called symbiosis.
The word Monera matured in the 1930s, the importance of the difference between species and nuclei has risen correctly. In 1925, Édouard Chatton divided all creatures into two empires prokaryotes and eukaryotes. The Kingdom of Monera is the sole member of the prokaryic empire. The human significance of crowns of animals, plants and fungi is difficult to eliminate; therefore, several other huge classification plans have been ignored at the empire level. The latter classification system continues broadly and Robert Whittaker proposes the biology of the five classes of life classification systems. Whittaker's system places most single cell organisms in prokaryotic Monera or eukaryotic protists. The other three kingdoms of his system are eukaryotic fungi, animals and plants.
Classification number Monera was originally a door proposed by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Later, the door was raised to Kingdom level by Edouard Chatton in 1925. Finally widely accepted classification and classification Monera was a five country classification system established by Robert Whittaker in 1969. Reflecting the history of evolution of life, in the three domain system of classification introduced by Carl Woese in 1977, the organism found in the Kingdom of Monera is divided into two areas: archaea and bacteria (third area As a eukaryote). In addition, since archaebacteria and eukaryotes are now considered to be more closely related to bacteria, the taxonomic group of Monera is a subfamily (excluding all descendants of the most recent common ancestor). The term "monellin" is an informal name for members of the group and may be used to refer to members of any domain (for the term "prokaryote").