When deciphering an unknown species and classifying organisms taxonomist use biochemichal, chromosal information, and physical and structural information. Today taxonomist study chromosome structure, blood protein, and the way organism develop before they are born because physical apperance is not always a good way to classify an organism.
There are a great number of questions that would go into this, but the 3 first questions would be:
Does it have a nucleus?
How does it obtain energy? (Another way to word this question would be "is it autotrophic, heterotrophic?")
Is it multicellular?
does it have one cell or many cells, is it an animal or a plant, does it eat other organisms or make it's own food, and does it need oxygen or carbon dioxide.
scientists have to answer these questions to determine what kingdom an organism belong in. or at least some of them, there are others.
they use physical behavior .....how they adapat and of chorse land air or water
cell type,number of cells,nutrishion,repuduction
ability to make food and number of cells
.All of the following are used to classify organisms into domains and kingdoms EXCEPT ____.Color of body
Robert whittaker divided the living organisms into 5 kingdoms
idk the answer so yeah
Not all kingdoms include unicellular organisms. The kingdoms that do not have unicellular organisms include the plantae and animalia kingdom.
I think that the seperation of organisms in the kingdoms are sorted by there characteristics like how many cells it has or the ability to make their own food or what kind of cell type it is
.All of the following are used to classify organisms into domains and kingdoms EXCEPT ____.Color of body
Animal and Plants
Taxonomists use fossil records, morphological structures, and DNA/genetic information in order to classify organisms into different kingdoms, phylums, and classes.
Most scientists use six kingdoms to classify organisms: Animalia (animals), Plantae (plants), Fungi (fungi), Protista (unicellular eukaryotes), Archaea, and Bacteria. This system provides a broad way to categorize living organisms based on their evolutionary relationships and characteristics.
three :)
scientists use taxonomy to classify and separate them into different groups
?
Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea, Eubacteria
Being trustworthy
i dnt know u tell me?
Cellular organization,Tissue organization,Mode of nutrition
Because old habits are hard to break. It is pretty logical to try to break up and classify living organisms but with the advent of modern genetic the kingdoms don't really fit as well any more but nothing has been devised to reclassify that I know of.