The Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA) of all living things is thought to have lived between 3.5 and 3.8 billion years ago. This is the last organism with which the organisms of today share a common descent. Despite their differences, all living things share the same basic characteristics of life.%0D%0A%0D%0AExamine the phylogenetic tree below, then choose the response that explains why, in terms of the characteristics of life, both bacterial kingdoms are separated on the tree from animals, plants, protists, and fungi.%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0A%0D%0A a%0D%0AAll living things must use energy. The method that bacteria use to obtain energy is different than the other kingdoms. Both bacterial kingdoms are capable of making their own energy from chemicals in their environment. Animals, protists, and fungi have to find their own food, whereas plants use photosynthesis to make glucose.%0D%0A b%0D%0AAll living things contain at least one cell. Animals, plants, protists, and fungi all contain eukaryotic cells. Both bacterial kingdoms contain organisms with prokaryotic cells.%0D%0A c%0D%0AAll living things must reproduce. People can compare the two bacterial kingdoms based on their mode of reproduction, which is binary fission. The animals, plants, protists, and fungi all reproduce sexually, a characteristic that allows people to compare those kingdoms.%0D%0A d%0D%0AAll living things grow and develop. Bacteria are small but do get bigger when they are ready to undergo mitosis. Animals, plants, protists, and fungi all grow due to the process of meiosis, the process that makes new body cells.
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This option explains the separation of the bacterial kingdoms from animals, plants, protists, and fungi in terms of the fundamental characteristic of life - the presence of cells. Eukaryotic cells, found in animals, plants, protists, and fungi, have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles, while prokaryotic cells, found in bacteria, lack these features. This fundamental difference in cell structure is a key factor in distinguishing between the different kingdoms of life on the phylogenetic tree.