The scientific name of an organism is made up of the names of all the categories that it belongs in.
The categories are:
Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species.
To save time, usually only the genus and species names are used.
e.g. the full scientific name for dogs is:
Animalia chordata mammalia carnivora canidae canis domesticus
or just canis domesticus for short
soo basically it goes like this ...... its based on the genus and species type
it depends on the organism that need to bi named.
Genus and species
the answer is genus and species
kingdom and phylum
genus then species name.
class and family
That IS the scientific name.
An organism is given a scientific name by its discoverer. As vampires are not scientifically recognized creatures and do not actually exist, they do not receive a name.
The scientific name for a grasshopper is Orthoptera caelifera. A quick note: scientific names are always Latin.
Genus and species.
It gives each different type of organism just one scientific name
Two names (the genus and the species) In chemistry. Orgasm and onanism.
Scientific names consists of genus, then species, written in italics. The genus is sometimes abbreviated. This way, it is easier for the scientific community to universally identify an organism.
No, the scientific name of a species consists of a genus name and a species name. The genus name is capitalized and both names are italicized when written.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
genus and species
An organism can only have one genus name as part of its scientific classification. The genus name is always capitalized and is used alongside the species name to give the organism its unique scientific name.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
An organism's scientific name is recognized worldwide.
The two advantages of using scientific names for organisms include their universality in the whole world since they are Latin, and no single organism can have more than one scientific name.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
Scientific names are specific to each type of organism that they describe, thus there is no scientific name to classify all 'oil seeds'.
The second name in an organism's scientific name represents the species to which the organism belongs. It is specific to that particular organism within the genus, providing further clarity and specificity in the naming system known as binomial nomenclature.