In an organism's scientific name, the first word is the genus, and the second word is the species.
DNA. It then formed unicellular organisms.
Genus and species.
genus
first part: genussecond part: species
The genus (always capitalised) is the first part of a scientific name. The plural is genera.Take the example Diomedea exulans, the Wandering albatross - in this case Diomedea is the genus!
The three rules for naming organisms are: 1) Each organism has a two-part scientific name (binomial nomenclature), 2) The scientific name is italicized or underlined, and 3) The first part of the name is the genus name and the second part is the species name.
Scientific names are made up of the genus followed by the species.
i think its taxonomyAnswerThe first part of a scientific name (such as the Homo in Homo sapiens or the Giraffa in Giraffa camelopardalis) is called the genus, of which the plural is genera.
System
Organisms are named by people.
Organisms get their scientific name by a taxonomic system developed in the 1700's by Carl Linnaeus. The first part of the scientific name is referred to as the Genus and the second part of the name is the species name.
What is the name of a person that studies organisms