The categories of biological classification (from largest to smallest) are: Life, Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species.
Subspecies are the smaller groupings within a species. It is below the rank of species. Subspecies usually are interbreed and isolated organisms.
Colonies
It is referred as a Taxon.Taxon- groups or level of organization in which organisms are classified.
The taxonomic classification of living organisms has different rankings, such as domain and kingdom. A domain is at the top and is the largest category to which an organism can belong to. The classification of kingdom is below a domain in rank. Kingdoms are subdivided into groups called phyla.
neither. algae, bacteria and fungi are all separate groups of classification
Domain.
first scientists grouped organisms into groups . Each group was called phylum. Then they separated each phylum into smaller and smaller groups called class
Regelia is not a domain.
Asparagus belongs in the domain of Eukaryota (eukaryote) which is one of the fundamental distinctions among groups of organisms - particularly in cellular biology.
taxonomy
Subspecies are the smaller groupings within a species. It is below the rank of species. Subspecies usually are interbreed and isolated organisms.
Asparagus belongs in the domain of Eukaryota (eukaryote) which is one of the fundamental distinctions among groups of organisms - particularly in cellular biology.
All the disease causing viruses are smaller in size than bacteria. Rickettsia and chlamydia are other groups of organisms, which are smaller than true bacteria.
Asparagus belongs in the domain of Eukaryota (eukaryote) which is one of the fundamental distinctions among groups of organisms - particularly in cellular biology.
ecotype
The groups that a kingdom are split into are: Bacteria, Archaea, Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia.
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