if you are talking about blood then I think it's positive and negative.
The classification of man and this monkey come from the range in which the monkey is found, the Spanish region in which this monkey; Rhesus Monkey was found showed evidence of faster aging then humans. It also showed massive muscle differences from the head of the body to the bottom of the body.
It's from the Greek "Rhesos," which was the name of a mythological figure. It's from "Rhesos", king of Thrace in north Greece and an ally of king Priamos in ancient Troy. His name was given to the monkey "rhesus macacus", when the experiments on this breed (of monkey) led to the subdivision of blood (positive, negative).
Scientists classify vertebrate into different groups by the way the animal looks or how big or small it is
Different groups of animals have evolved over millions of years to adapt to various environments and ecological niches. These adaptations allow animals to thrive in different conditions, such as different diets or habitats. The diversity of animal groups also contributes to the overall stability and complexity of ecosystems.
Lakia the Russian Dog, Ham the Chimp and Albert the Rhesus Monkey.
If you mean Rhesus - it's a classification in blood groups of a lack of Rhesus anti-bodies.
I have a rhesus negative blood group and my sister has rhesus posotive. Does this mean we have different fathers
The is no standard collective noun for rhesus monkeys (or rhesus macaque), however there are collective nouns for the general noun 'monkeys' that can be used:a barrel of rhesus monkeysa cartload of rhesus monkeysa tribe of rhesus monkeysa troop of rhesus monkeys
Rhesus macaque was created in 1780.
Type O or type A broadly speaking. it also depends on other proteins found on the surface of donated blood cells such as rhesus proteins. someone can be rhesus plus or rhesus minus meaning they either have the protein or don't. You can only receive blood of the same rhesus type of as your own for example: A rhesus positive can only receive A rhesus positive or O rhesus positive
Yes. Each person has two genes to make up their blood group and rhesus group, one from each parent. For blood groups, groups A and B are dominant over O, and for rhesus groups positive is dominant over negative. If you have one of each, your type will be whichever the dominant one is. Firstly looking at the blood group - an O group child can be born to group B parents if both the mother's and father's blood group genotype is BO. The child has a 25% chance of being BB (group B), 50% chance of being BO (group B) and 25% chance of being OO (group O). Looking at the rhesus group - mother's genotype must be Neg/Neg, father could be pos/pos, in which case the child will always be rhesus positive, or pos/neg where the child has a 50% chance of being rhesus positive, and 50% chance of being rhesus negative.
There should be no problem concerning the blood groups. Only when the woman is Rhesus negative and the man is Rhesus positive, the offspring can be affected by Rh-disease (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rh_disease)
Discounting rare but possible mutations the following holds true. Parents blood groups A and A, A and B, A and O, B and B, B and O, O and O can produce type O blood in their children. The rhesus factor (Rhesus positive/rhesus negative) depends on the rhesus pairing in the parents as follows: Father rhesus positive, mother rhesus positive or rhesus negative = rhesus positive or rhesus negative Father rhesus negative, mother rhesus positive = rhesus positive or rhesus negative Father rhesus negative, mother rhesus negative = rhesus negative Example: A rhesus positive father and rhesus positive mother of blood type A and O respectively could produce an O positive child, as could a rhesus positive father and rhesus negative mother both of blood group O. Follow the link to an excellent site.
There should be no problem concerning the blood groups. Only when the woman is Rhesus negative and the man is Rhesus positive, the offspring can be affected by Rh-disease (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rh_disease)
Rhesus monkey , ( Macaca mullata )
no cause a positive and negative make a negative unless the positive has a really strong blood line
The rhesus monkey or rhesus macaque, is native to Central, South and Southeast Asia. It can be found in its natural habitat in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and parts of China, as well as other countries in this region of the world.