The genus and species of a living or an extinct organism is the category that an organism is classified in. This also gives organisms specific names used for binomial nomenclature.
Most bacteria are classified in the Kingdom of Eubacteria. Though bacteria sometimes is not classified as a living organism, some do contain DNA and RNA.
They are not classified as living because they cannot replicate DNA or RNA without a host and do not have metabolism with out host. But they can be also classified as a living organism because they have life cycles, and virions that vary greatly in shape, complexity, and size. They are also the most numerous life-forms existing on earth
that would technically be classified as a predator.
Yes - organisms must be living things. They can be dead - as in they were once alive, but they cannot be a non-living thing, such as a mineral. All organisms are capable (in some way) of responding to stimulus, growing, reproducing and maintaining homeostasis. Therefore a non-living thing cannot be called an organism.
cell
Spiders are classified as animals because they belong to the kingdom Animalia. They are multicellular, heterotrophic organisms that possess specialized cells and tissues, as well as a defined body structure with distinct organ systems. Additionally, spiders exhibit characteristics such as mobility, growth, and reproduction that align with the defining features of animals.
It is both a vascular and living organism.
Aristotle classified living things based on the location of the organism.
Considering that there are currently single cell organism classified as living beings then they are.
The genus and species of a living or an extinct organism is the category that an organism is classified in. This also gives organisms specific names used for binomial nomenclature.
all because yeast is a living organism and anything living has to orthenticate withh all of MS GREN otherwise it isnt classified as a living organism
Yes, pretty much anything that is living (ie anything that eats/grows/breaths/reproduces, etc) is classified as an organism.
Most bacteria are classified in the Kingdom of Eubacteria. Though bacteria sometimes is not classified as a living organism, some do contain DNA and RNA.
Virus' are not living - they cannot exist outside a living organism, and therefore cannot be classified in the same way as other organisms
It is incorrect to call a virus a microbe because a microbe is a living organism, while a virus is not. Viruses do not exhibit all the characteristics necessary to be classified as a living organism.
Linnaeus classified living organism into two groups Regnum Animale ('animal kingdom') for animals and Regnum Vegetabile ('vegetable kingdom'. He didn't included other living organism such as bacteria and also fungi.