Yes everything does and if you look hard enough you can find it
The scientific name for the columnar cactus is Cactaceae.
cactusarrightele
Carnegiea gigantea is the latin name for the saguaro cactus.
The scientific name of the organ pipe cactus is Stenocereus thurberi.
The scientific name for Mexican lime cactus is Ferocactus latispinus.
it is Cactaceae
the genus mammillaria has several species that have fishhok spines
CACTUSDomain: EukaryaKingdom: PlantaeSubkingdom: ViridaeplantaeInfrakingdom: StreptophytaDivision: TracheophytaSubdivision: SpermatophytinaInfradivision: AngiospermaeClass: MagnoliopsidaeSuperorder: CaryophyllanaeOrder: CaryophyllalesFamily: Cactaceae*Please note that there are many Gena in the cactus family.
Well... I personally think that cactus finches eat cactuses because in some images on the web, if you type in cactus finches, some will have a picture of a cactus finch eating bits of a cactus.
The accepted scientific name is Pyralidae.
Cactus finches are native to the Galapagos Islands. So they're found in subtropical and tropical forests and shrubland. Scientifically, they used to groupedwith American sparrows and buntings into the Emberizidae family. But they now are grouped with tanagers into the Thraupidae family.Their specific scientific nameinvolves the genus to which they belong. It's the equivalent of a person's last name. It also involves the species, which somewhat may be thought of as a loose first name. For example, the species name is always Geospiza. But there are six sets of species names. The large cactus finch is Geospiza conirostris, the sharp beaked ground finch Geospiza difficilis,* the medium ground finch Geospiza fortis, the small ground finch Geospiza fuliginosa, the large ground finch Geospiza magnirostris, and the common cactus finch Geospiza scandens.There's a subcategory that's called the vampire finch [Geospiza difficilis septentrionalis].
Ferocactus, but there is more than one type so each type will have a different second name.