no they can't
no they can't
kingdoms are divided into phylums, and each phylum is divided into classes. some phyla only have one class though, such as nematoda.
Kingdoms are divided into phyla (singular is phylum), each phylum is divided into classes, each class is divided into orders, and orders are divided into families. Families are divided into genera (singular is genus), and each genus is divided into species. Keep in mind that for each main group there can be a subgroup if necessary (for example: sub-phylum, suborder, subfamily, subgenus, or subspecies.
Biological classification consists of seven main taxonomic ranks. These are: Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species. Each of these ranks groups organisms based on shared characteristics in a hierarchical manner.
In biology, a genus can be defined as a grouping of organisms that differentiate them from other organisms. Biologically speaking, the genus is the grouping just before the species. For instance, the tiger, the lion, the jaguar, and the leopard, all of which are different species, belong to the same biological genus: Panthera. In general use, genus refers to "a class of things that have common characteristics and that can be divided into subordinate kinds." (Source: Google)
Identifying organisms by their genus and species names is called binomial nomenclature. Each species is given a unique two-part scientific name, consisting of the genus name followed by the species name.
genus
Yes, each phylum of organisms is typically divided into orders. Orders are hierarchical groupings of organisms within a phylum that share common characteristics and are further classified based on similarities in anatomy, behavior, or genetic makeup.
The top or broadest level of the classification system for living organisms is called "domain." There are three domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. Each domain includes multiple kingdoms, which are further divided into phyla, classes, orders, families, genera, and species.
He established conventions for the naming of living organisms using binomial nomenclature (the genus name followed by the species name), and developed an hierarchical system for classification of organisms, which became known as the Linnaean taxonomy. The Linnaean system classified nature within a hierarchy, starting with Kingdoms which were divided into Classes, divided into Orders, divided into Genera, divided into Species. The Linnaean system of scientific classification is widely used in the biological sciences, and the expansion of knowledge has led to development of the number of hierarchical levels within the system (phyla, family, subclasses, etc.) and there has been an increase in the administrative requirements of the system. It does remain the only extant working classification system that is universally acceptanced by the scientific community.
if this is for homework dont copy okay because copying is basd and bad people poo well. dB> the answer is simply even if you are copying idgaf because im a boss and im still in 7th grade of course all of the organisms are classified into a kingdom and then are divided into one of several classes of course silly gooseys
my teacher said it is "species" not genus.