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Kingdom
organisms in the same order (APEX)
The broadest group is Domain or SuperKingdom. This group, which consists of Eukarya, includes the organisms that most people are most familiar with: all animals, plants, fungi, and protists. They also include the vast majority of the organisms that paleontologists work with. Although they show unbelievable diversity in form, they share fundamental characteristics of cellular organization, biochemistry, and molecular biology. kingdom is the highest/most inclusive taxonomic category in the 7 group system Kingdom.......Kids Phylum ..........Prefer Class............Candy Order............Over Family..........Fine Genus ..........Green Species.........Salads Sub-Species A Mnemonic device to remember it.
they both share the characteristics of life, but cells make up an organism, meaning that cells are the basic building blocks of life
Class, Phylum, Family... there's a bunch of answeres to that one. *~* Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Fammily, Genus, Species These are categories used to classify all living things on the earth. Kingdom is the top, going down to species. Specific traits that are sahred among a group of organisism can be unique to any one fo these groups from the Kingdom to the species.
The same kingdom.
No, organisms in the same kingdom do not have to belong to the same domain. Kingdom is a broader classification level than domain. Organisms in the same kingdom share similar characteristics and traits, but they can belong to different domains, which are higher-level classifications.
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Kingdom
The broadest level among those listed is "kingdom." This classification represents a broad grouping of organisms that share fundamental features and characteristics.
Carolus Linnaeus was the Swedish botanist who created a classification method for organisms. The number of organisms at each level of classification increases as one progresses from species to kingdom.
If two organisms share the same kingdom, it means they belong to the same broad classification group based on their characteristics and evolutionary history. Kingdom is the second highest taxonomic rank, below domain, and organisms within the same kingdom share basic similarities in terms of cellular structure, metabolism, and reproduction.
Kingdom: Broadest level of classification, grouping organisms based on fundamental similarities. Phylum: Groups organisms with common characteristics beyond those shared by all eukaryotes. Class: Further divides organisms within a phylum based on more specific characteristics. Order: Groups similar families of organisms with shared characteristics. Family: Includes related genera that share common characteristics. Genus: Groups species that are closely related and share a common ancestor. Species: Most specific level, comprising individuals that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring.
Yes, if two organisms share the same kingdom, they are also in the same domain. The domain is the broadest level of classification, and all organisms within a kingdom belong to the same domain.
A kingdom is a taxonomic rank in biological classification, typically comprising a large group of organisms that share certain fundamental characteristics. It is one of the broadest levels of classification that helps organize and group similar organisms together based on their shared evolutionary history and characteristics.
starts with 2 kingdoms vertebrates and invertebrates the vertebrat kingdoms is split up in to 5 kingdoms are reptile, mammal. bird, fish and anphibian
In biology, a phylum is a taxonomic rank that is used to classify organisms with similar body plans. Organisms within the same phylum share certain characteristics and evolutionary history. It is a major category in the classification of living organisms.