No because if two animals have the exact same scientific name then they would be the same animal.
No because if two animals have the exact same scientific name then they would be the same animal.
turtle dove Most animals have at least two names, their common name that we all know them by and their scientific or Latin name.
A scientific name can only refer to one species. The scientific name consists of two parts: the genus name and the species name. This binomial nomenclature system is used to uniquely identify each species.
When using genus and species in taxonomy , the genus will be the same for two very closely related organisms. The species will separate them.
The pine and the white share the same scientific name.
The young of all birds have the same scientific name as the adults. Thus, a baby kookaburra's scientific name is the same as that of the adult birds. There are two species of kookaburra in Australia: the scientific name for the Blue-winged kookaburra is Dacelo leachii, and the scientific name for the Laughing kookaburra is Dacelo novaeguineae.
Scientific names are important for two reasons. (1) There are so many species of animals in the world that scientific names are the one unique name for that one unique species and (2) through scientific names, you can see how the different species of animals are related. Black squirrels and red squirrels aren't the same species, but they're related and their scientific names reflect this.
because they could not be identified
The scientific name for grass is Poaceae.
Scientific name: Choloepus didactylus
The scientific term is "binomial nomenclature", which means a system of naming plants and animals in which each species is given a name consisting of two terms of which the first names the genus and the second the species itself.
A scientific name consists of two taxa: the genus and the species.