Chordata
All four organisms belong to the kingdom Animalia.
Kingdom is the taxon that includes the broadest characteristics.
kingdomkingdomThe taxon that includes the broadest characteristic is called Kingdom.
All members of a taxon share a common ancestral group and specific characteristics that define the group. Taxa are used to classify and organize living organisms based on evolutionary relationships and shared characteristics.
Organisms with jointed legs belong to the kingdom Animalia. This kingdom encompasses a wide variety of organisms with diverse characteristics and body structures.
They all belong to the kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular, heterotrophic organisms.
Kingdom is the real taxon that has a clear biological identity as it contains all the organisms.
Kingdom is the taxon that includes the broadest characteristics.
kingdomkingdomThe taxon that includes the broadest characteristic is called Kingdom.
All members of a taxon share a common ancestral group and specific characteristics that define the group. Taxa are used to classify and organize living organisms based on evolutionary relationships and shared characteristics.
Organisms with jointed legs belong to the kingdom Animalia. This kingdom encompasses a wide variety of organisms with diverse characteristics and body structures.
They all belong to the kingdom Animalia, which includes multicellular, heterotrophic organisms.
Yes. All multicellular organisms belong to the domain Eukarya.
Kingdom
( ) = occasionally, but not always, used. Kingdom Phylum / Division in plants and bacteria (subphylum) Class Order Family Genus Species (Breed) The above list are all taxa. This is the plural of the word "taxon" thus "genus" is a taxon and "Family" is a taxon". Various publishers also use subdivisions of all of these to show how various organisms are related. Species is often divided into "subspecies" and "variety". The term "taxa" and "taxon" were derived from the word "taxonomy". This has the same source as the word "taxi" and basically means "putting things places by name".
The cassowary is a bird, and all birds belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya. Eukarya covers all organisms in the kingdom Animalia.
The highest taxon that contains all others listed is the 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.