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No, Canis and Felis belong to different taxonomic families. Canis is the genus for animals like dogs, wolves, and foxes, belonging to the family Canidae, while Felis is the genus for animals like domestic cats, belonging to the family Felidae. They are not directly related in terms of taxonomy.
Scientists have determined that the Ursus maritimus or polar bear and the Ursus arctos or brown bear, are genetically related. This is supported by the evidence that these 2 species can interbreed to produce a hybrid, fertile offspring.
Felis domesticus
i think yes
The scientific name for a grizzly bear is Ursus arctos horribilis.
Carnivores in the rocky mountains include the following:Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos)Black bear (Ursus americanus)Gray wolf (Canis lupus)Coyote (Canis latrans)Mountain lion (Puma concolor)Lynx (Felis lynx)Bobcat (Felis rufus)Wolverine (Gulo gulo)Fisher (Martes pennanti)Marten (Martes americana)Source: MODELING CARNIVORE HABITAT IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION: A LITERATURE REVIEW AND SUGGESTED STRATEGY
no, because pandas are classified ursus in binomial nomenclature and zebras are not.
Felis rufus is the obsolete taxonomic name for the bobcat. It is now called Lynx rufus and is closely related to the other three species of lynx. Eurasian lynx - Lynx lynxCanada lynx - Lynx canadensisIberian lynx - Lynx pardinus
Yes. The brown and polar bears are very close relatives. The two species diverged within the last several hundred thousand years.
Ursus maritimus ("sea bear") is the scientific name for a polar bear.(Originally the polar bear was classified a separate genus from other species of bears, as Thalarctos maritimus.)I think its Ursus maritimus but i am not 100% sure :)The scientific name for the polar bear is Ursus maritimus.Formally Thalarctos Maritimus. However, since recent data shows they are very closely related to brown bears, it has been changed to Ursus Maritimus.The scientific name for polar bears is Ursus maritimus.
UrsusThe full name of the grizzly bear is Ursus arctos horriblis. The genus would be Ursus.