The characteristics are seeds, if they have a vascular tissue and if they have flowers or not. Hope this is helpful!
Peanut butter, butter toast, sock puppets, and captain crunch
legs and animals
Odk
aristotle classified plants and animals based on the phylum, vertebra,invertebra,with their shape,height,etc........
He classified plants on the basis of stem structure
It was inadequate because he only classified things according to whether they lived on land, in the water, or in air. He also grouped plants based on the differences in their stems.
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Aristotle classified matter as either plants or animals. The main weaknesses in his classification was the fact it did not factor in specific species and was a general classification.
At one time, all living things were classified into two kingdoms of plants and animals. Aristotle developed this first classification system.
Aristotle separated plants from animals. Then animals were subdivided by land, water, and air. Plants were subdivided as small, medium, and large.
Aristotle was the first to classify plants into trees, shrubs and herbs. He also classified animals into those which contain red blood cells and tose which do not contain red blood cells.
Aristotle was first to classify organisms on the basis of similarities,Theophrastus classified the plants,Carolus linnaeous,margulis and Schwartz.
Swedish Naturalist Carolus Linnaeus devised a system of grouping organisms into hierarchical categories according to their form and structure. Aristotle classified organisms into only two taxa - either plants or animals.
Aristotle classified animals according to their location, and plants according to their stems. Linnaeus, on the other hand, classified organisms according to their form and structure using a seven-level hierarchial system. However, Linnaeus' system was more accurate, being that Aristotle's system of classification was too general and organisms could be placed into more than one category.
Aristotle classified animals according to their location, and plants according to their stems. Linnaeus, on the other hand, classified organisms according to their form and structure using a seven-level hierarchial system. However, Linnaeus' system was more accurate, being that Aristotle's system of classification was too general and organisms could be placed into more than one category.