An organism that belongs to the same family must also belong to the same kingdom and phylum. An example of two organisms that belong to the same family would be a lion and a tiger.
Gorillas are because we originated from monkeys.
No we didn't originate from monkeys we originated from Adam the first human being who was made by God the Father Almighty!!!!!!! not monkeys If you want an answer an answer would be all mammels creatures with fur like cats
Yes i think because in science to day my teacher talked about how organisms and humans are alike in many diffrent ways.See organisms have a family the family is us and they live off us and use sunlight to get energy and so do humans.
There are more than six species in the genus Homo(human). So far, the species found that are related to Homoinclude: H. antecessor, H. cepranensis, H. erectus, H. ergaster, H. floresiensis, H. gautengensis, H. habilis, H. heidelbergensis, H. neanderthalensis, H. rhodesiensis, and H. rudolfensis. Some scientist believe there to be a human subspecies called H. sapiens idaltu. There scientist place modern humans under the name of H. sapiens sapiens (usually called just H. sapiens).
Vampires have 24 pairs of Chromosomes
Humans have 23 pairs of Chromosomes
Chimps, gorillas, orangutans, and pigs all share similar characteristics to humans.
Gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees.
Yes, the systems used for the taxonomic nomenclature of organisms are distinct and independent between kingdoms. The binomial name given to a species must be unique only within the kingdom to which the species belongs. For this reason, no two animals species and no two plant species could share the same name, but one plant and one animal may. Because the domain Eukarya is divided into six kingdoms, there could theoretically be six species with a common binomial (scientific) name.
No. Insects is just a lay-mans term for all animals that classify as insects (invertebrates with wings and six legs, for instance). A species classifies an organism as one that has distinct features from other organisms of the same Genus. The Blue Bottle Fly, for instance, is a species of insect.
Warm Blooded - Cold Blooded Mammals - not mammals Humans - Animals - Plants carnivores - herbivores - omnivores (I know its more than seven, but if seven is the minimum and the maximum, just take out Humans - Animals - Plants) WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG WRONG is right. The categories used to classify things are kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. King Phillip can order fried grasshopers. This ia a great answer, ithought till i saw wromg
That is impossible, many insects have not been discovered. In general, insects all have 6 legs.
InsectsFly
Animals, insects, birds, and humans, as well as wind and water.
Yes, the systems used for the taxonomic nomenclature of organisms are distinct and independent between kingdoms. The binomial name given to a species must be unique only within the kingdom to which the species belongs. For this reason, no two animals species and no two plant species could share the same name, but one plant and one animal may. Because the domain Eukarya is divided into six kingdoms, there could theoretically be six species with a common binomial (scientific) name.
No. Humans weigh six times more on the Earth than on the moon. Since there is less gravity. But their mass would still be the same
# Genus Prostegotherium. # Genus Pseudostegotherium. # Genus Astegotherium. # Genus Stegosimpsonia. # Genus Stegotherium. # Genus Dasypus (long-nosed armadillos). # Genus Propraopus. # Genus Dasypodon. # Genus Utaetus. # Genus Meteutatus. # Genus Anteutatus. # Genus Pseudeutatus. # Genus Stenotatus. # Genus Proeutatus. # Genus Archaeutatus. # Genus Paraeutatus. # Genus Doellotatus. # Genus Chasicotatus. # Genus Ringueletia. # Genus Eutatus. # Genus Isutaetus. # Genus Anutaetus. # Genus Hemiutaetus. # Genus Amblytatus. # Genus Eodasypus. # Genus Prozaedyus. # Genus Vetelia. # Genus Proeuphractus. # Genus Paleuphractus. # Genus Chorobates. # Genus Macroeuphractus. # Genus Paraeuphractus. # Genus Acantharodeia. # Genus Chaetophractus (peludos). # Genus Zaedyus (pichi). # Genus Euphractus (six-banded armadillo). # Genus Tolypeutes (three-banded armadillos). # Genus Cabassous (naked-tailed armadillos). # Genus Priodontes (giant armadillo). # Genus Chlamyphorus(fairy armadillos). # Genus Calyptophractus.
No they have the same amount of organs as a person with a six pack
There are 79 species of hagfish that are split up into six different genus. The genus Eptatretus contains 49 species, the genus Myxine contains 23 species, the genus Nemamyxine contains two species, the genus Neomyxine contains one species, the genus Notomyxine contains one species, and the genus Rubicundus contains four species.
The subgroups of phylum are classes. Phylum is a taxonomic rank that is above class and below kingdom in the hierarchy of biological classification. Classes are further subdivided into orders, families, genera, and species.
Because there is six types in the Kingdom (of life) : animals, plants, fungus, protista, Archaea and bacteria. The humans are not plants, fungus, protista, archaea and bacteria. They are animals. The human's phylum is Chordata (vertebrate). The human's class is mammalia. It's order is primate (the same as apes). It's family is Hominidae (apes that have no tail and can gather food with their hands.) The Human's sub-family is Homininae. It's tribe is Hominini. It's genus is Homo and it's specie is scientifically named Homo Sapiens.We have much more in common with animals than we think. Like us, some animals can make tools. The only difference is that our tools are a lot more complex. Like us, some animals have a language. The only difference is that their language contain less than ten words.
Just like the wasp they can live up to six months but can also be eaten by other animals. Not most likely humans are a problem, because they mostly leave humans and their pets alone.
Both are polar, beyond about 60 degrees of latitude. Neither is well-inhabited by humans or animals, because of the extreme cold. (There are more people and more animals in the Arctic than there are in Antarctica, which is about 30 degrees colder than the Arctic, and too cold for humans and animals.) Both experience significant periods of 24-hour darkness and 24-hour sunlight beyond their respective circles -- about 66 degrees. At the poles, these periods are six months long.
His system is called Binomial Nomenclature. An example would be Felis concolor. Felis is the Genus and concolor is the Species. The genus is capitalized and the species is not.Carl Linnaeus (born 1707) made a classification system for living beings we use today. It starts with Kingdoms: Animalia (Animals), Plantae (Plants), Fungi, Protozoa and Monera (Bacteria). Some scientists claim that there are six kingdoms and that Monera is split into Eubacteria and Archaebacteria.After the Kingdoms are the Phylum, then Class, then Order, then Family, then Subfamily, then Tribe, Genus, and Species. Descending, each type gets more and more specific.Now for the "Two-word" part. If you take the Genus and Species and put them one after another, you get the scientific name. For example, we humans are Homo Sapiens and Apple Trees are Malus domestica. Chimps also have the Genus "Homo" but not the Species "Sapiens".
No. Insects is just a lay-mans term for all animals that classify as insects (invertebrates with wings and six legs, for instance). A species classifies an organism as one that has distinct features from other organisms of the same Genus. The Blue Bottle Fly, for instance, is a species of insect.