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2,000,000
the human body
2- Plants and Animals
Before the 1600's, many scientists divided organisms into two groups: plants and animals. But as more organisms were discovered, some did not fit into eaither group. In the 1700's, CarolusLinnaes, a Swedish scientist founded modern taxonomy. Taxonomy- is the science of describing, classifying, and naming living things based on their shape and structure.
Scientists need to use scientific names for multiple reasons. Here are three of these reasons. First, it is to avoid confusion. You see, many organisms share a common name and differs from place to place. If scientists used the common names, it could lead to incorrect data. Another reason is that it describes an organism. It brings out the organisms certain characteristics. Lastly, Latin will not change over the years. As you most likely know, Latin is a dead language, or not spoken anymore. These are three reasons why Scientists use the scientific names instead of the common names.
2,000,000
40 thousand spiecices of organisms have been identified and there are plenty more that are still unidentifed.
About Mostly Every kinds, and different kinds. Not sure execatly how many though. Hope this helps. Maz!
About 112
118
8
more than 20
It is impossible to quantify an unknown factor.
An ecosystem that has many different kinds of organisms shows efficient biodiversity. Terrestrial biodiversity tends to be highest at the equator.
one
the human body
No,the scientists were not correct in their estimate of how many genes would be identified during the human genome project because they had identified an estimated 30,000 genes (instead of the expected 100,000), constituting just 1% of the total human.