The genus and species of a living or an extinct organism is the category that an organism is classified in. This also gives organisms specific names used for binomial nomenclature.
catigory
The two advantages of using scientific names for organisms include their universality in the whole world since they are Latin, and no single organism can have more than one scientific name.
Scientific names never differ among scientists.
Atom, Molecule, Organelle, Cell, Tissue, Organ, Organ system, Organism, Population, Community, Ecosystem, Biosphere
SPECIES
an organism can have any number of common names depending upon the number of regional languages spoken in the habitat of the organism but it can have only one scintific name
Amoeba.
vovox
Binomial nomenclature.
Two names (the genus and the species) In chemistry. Orgasm and onanism.
Linnaeus's major contribution to organism classification was the development of a system of binomial nomenclature, where each species is given a two-part Latin name consisting of the genus and species. This system is still used today and forms the basis of modern taxonomy.
they make it up :)
Binomial nomenclature.
2 to 3
Binomial Nomenclature classifies organisms with two names each. The first of the two is the name of the Genus that the organism is in. The second name is the name of the Species itself. These two names are then combined to form the full name of the organism.
For animals: organism