Human beings belong to the animal class. More specifically, we are mammals.
Mammalia.
Mammalia
Humans belong to the subspecies Homo sapiens sapiens.
Humans belong to the sub phylum Vertebrata.
Humans belong to the subclass Eutheria
Homo sapien sapiens
Mammalia
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
The smallest taxon in biological classification is species. It consists of individuals that are capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring.
Homo sapiens means wise man, thinking man, rational man, knowing man.It is the species name for us, humans, sometimes referred to as anatomically modern humans or AMH. Our trinomial name is homo sapiens sapiens . The skeleton taxonomy is :-Domain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum Chordata / ( sub P. Vertebrata )Class Mammalia / ( sub C. Theria )Order PrimatesFamily HominidaeGenus HomoSpecies H. sapiens / ( sub S. H.s.sapiens )You can find the full taxonomy on Wikipedia under "homo sapiens"It should be "homo sapiens". It means "wise man" and it's the Latin name of our species - i.e. humans.It combines the Latin word homo (mankind) with the adjective sapiens (wise, sensible, understanding) to describe the modern human race. The implication is that all previous forms of humankind were stupid, which is a completely false idea.It means 'wise man', or 'learned man'.
The first is the genus, this is always capitalised. The second word is the species name, which is never capitalised. Both words are always written in italics or underlined if handwritten. For example, the species name for humans is Homo sapiens; Homo is the genus name, and sapiens is the species name. Sometimes, a scientific name will contain an additional word at the end, in zoology this will indicate a sub-species; in botany additional terms may refer to sub-species, varieties, hybrid varieties etc.
Domain: Eukaryria Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Sub Phylum: Vertabrata Class: Ostheyicthes
All five sub-species of Tigers belong to the phylum Chordata, Class Mammalia.
The grizzly bear is a member of the Ursidae family. Grizzlies are a sub-species of the brown bear. They belong to the Carnivora order and the Mammalia class.
The Camargue horse is not a separate species, nor are their 'sub-species' of the breed. All modern horse breeds belong to the same species, Equus Caballus
Sub
The answer will be in bold fonts.Humans are in:Kingdom: animaliaphylum: cordataclass: mammaliaorder: primatafamily: hominidaegenus: homospecies: sapien
All cats belong to the family Felidae, which has many sub-groups in which the cat species is divided up into.
Not really even though are in some of the same classes, but they are two different species or sub-species. Simple cats are feline and humans are people although all are equal. Hope that helps!
There are no sub-species of the kakapo. The only species of this flightless parrot is Strigops habroptila.
Humans are primates, but we are not monkeys. Monkeys are a different sub-species of primates. Humans are closely related to the ape species : Gorillas, Bonobos, Chimpanzees, Orangutans and Gibbons.
A animal group of a Grilla is called a mammal
kingdom is the most specific classification category i found this out in my science book chapter 7 Improved answer: species and genus after because some species are categorized into sub-species The answer is in your question, the most specific is species. The word specific is actually a newer word based on species, from the Latin "specificus"- constituting a species. Specific is generally defined as limited, involving or relating to only one particular thing or type of thing. In biology specific is defined as refering to characteristics limited to a species. The use of sub-species as being more specific is problematical as a suspecies may be discontinued if the differences defining the sub-species are determined to be minor and the sub-species is returned to the species, or the differences so great that the sub-species is given a species of its own.
No. All extant humans are of the species Homo sapiens. The variation in modern human DNA is very small (about 0.1%) compared to other species, which suggests that all modern humans descend from a small group that lived about 100,000 years ago. No modern human group has been classified as a sub-species. However, H. neanderthalensis is sometimes classified as a sub species of H. sapiens (H. sapiens neanderthalensis).Several species of humans existed in the past. H. erectus spread out of Africa and into Europe and Asia almost 2 million years ago, long before modern humans evolved from a common ancestor in Africa around 200,000 years ago. H. erectus eventually evolved into other species, such as H. antecessor, H. heidelbergensisand H. neanderthalensis. Modern humans who migrated out of Africa around 70,000 years ago coexisted with H. neanderthalensis and other sister species and my have shared habitat with them for long periods of time. These sister species were extinct by about 33,000 years ago.