catigory
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
thousands of different enzynes each one specific to a different chemical reaction
A scientific nomenclature for a plant or animal is universally accepted in the scientific community, and relates to that plant or animal only (though may be changed if studies reveal new information). Several common names can be used for the same plant or animal depending on where in the World.
It can be quite misleading if the common name leads you to believe an organism is closely related to another, or is a part of the same family/genus. For example - Guinea pigs are not in the pig family, nor are they from Guinea. Also, many common names change from area to area - leading to several names for the same species. For example - the angler (Lophius piscatorius), is also sometimes called fishing-frog, frog-fish or sea-devil.
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.
an organism can have any number of common names depending upon the number of regional languages spoken in the habitat of the organism but it can have only one scintific name
Different regions might have different names often different in locations and different languages.
One thing that can happen is, if it is common in multiple parts of the world, it is given a name by one group of people and then given another name by a different group. Then if these two groups interact with one language, then that language might have two words for that animal.
Because common names differ with language, while scientific names are always the same, no matter what language. Ex: Canis Lupis
An organism's scientific name is recognized worldwide.
because species are varied from different parts of the world and common names are in different languages like when people in Qatar say apples they mean potatoes, which some people call apples of the earth. However scientific names are in one language (Latin) and no nicknames are allowed
Scientific names provide a universal way to precisely identify and classify organisms, regardless of language or location. They help avoid confusion that can arise from different regions using different common names for the same organism. Additionally, scientific names often reflect the evolutionary relationships among species, providing valuable information beyond just a description of the organism.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
A scientific name is what is used for an organism so that everyone, everywhere will know what it is. Scientific names are important because a single animal, for example, may go by many different common names depending on region.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.