yes. the scientific name uses both the genus and the species.
To understand why you need to know the way they come up with scientific names. It is like this, Genus species, for example Homo sapien. The names are latin and the reason that scientists use latin terms is that all the scientists in the world use the language. They chose a language that was used only in very few areas and now latin is the language that all scientists talk to each other in.
All scientific name must have at least two words that are commonly in Latin.
The scientific name for all plants and all animals in in Latin. They all have a genus and species name, which are in Latin.
Scientific names are all in Latin, and are not in different languages.
Scientific names are all in latin, so the scientific name of the dragonflies is Anisoptera (infraorder), in the Philippines, as it is everywhere else.
To understand why you need to know the way they come up with scientific names. It is like this, Genus species, for example Homo sapien. The names are latin and the reason that scientists use latin terms is that all the scientists in the world use the language. They chose a language that was used only in very few areas and now latin is the language that all scientists talk to each other in.
All scientific name must have at least two words that are commonly in Latin.
The scientific name for all plants and all animals in in Latin. They all have a genus and species name, which are in Latin.
Scientific names are all in Latin, and are not in different languages.
All scientists recognize this language.
Scientific names are all in latin, so the scientific name of the dragonflies is Anisoptera (infraorder), in the Philippines, as it is everywhere else.
Scientific names of all living creatures are in Latin. Occasionally a Greek word will be used, or a "latinized" word will be created if none exists. An example of this is the scientific name for a particular owl mite, named "Strigophilus garylarsonii,'' apparently named after the creator of the "Far Side" comic strip, Gary Larson. The scientific name consists of the genus and species, the last two categories in the taxonomical classification of the living organism in question.
turtle dove Most animals have at least two names, their common name that we all know them by and their scientific or Latin name.
Yes, all organisms have scientific names. Thus planarians have scientific names too.
It is Canis lupus.For the source and more detailed information concerning this subject, click on the related links section indicated below.
latin A+
Yes, they have.