The kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species of a plant are its biological classification. This classification was devised by Carolus Linnaeus.
The classification of plants can vary, but in general it would be Plantae (kingdom), Angiosperms/Gymnosperms (phylum), Magnoliopsida/Liliopsida (class), Rosales/Fabales (order), Rosaceae/Fabaceae (family), Genus, and Species. Each specific plant would have its own unique classification under these categories.
The sundew belongs to the phylum Anthophyta, which is also known as angiosperms or flowering plants.
Mosses are brypohytes (br-eye-yo-fights). They are plants. So the taxonomy (which is what you are asking about ) would be: Kingdom: plants, division: bryophytes, classes: takakiopsida, sphagnopsid, andreaeopsida, andreaeobryopsida, polytrichopsida, bryopsida, family: a subset of the above, genus: you can look it up, species - that is very "specific" (get it?)... You can buy sphagnum moss at most nurseries...
Daisies are plants, and plants don't have quite the same strict taxonomic breakdown as animals do. Moreover, daisies are a family of plants and not a specific species. Kingdom: Plantae Order: Asterales Family: Asteraceae Anything in this family is a 'daisy'.
Kingdom: Plantae Phylum: Tracheophyta (vascular plants)
The phylum is a level of organisation that is used to group animals by their anatomical structures. Plants are separated from animals at the kingdom and as such do not have a phylum, however they can be referred to as having the 'phylum' angiospermae
domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species
'Plants' are a Kingdom in of themselves, Kingdom Plantae. There are hundreds of thousands of individual species in this Kingdom, across a range of Phyla, Orders, etc.
these are the 6 kingdoms....heres a trick to remember them....HOPE THIS HELPS! Kingdom King Phylum Phillip Class Came Order Over Family For Genus Good Species Spaghetti
The sundew belongs to the phylum Anthophyta, which is also known as angiosperms or flowering plants.
If by "green ash" you are referring to Fraxinus pennsylvanica, then: Kingdom Plantae (plants) Phylum Tracheophyta (vascular plants) Subphylum Angiospermae (flowering plants) Class Magnoliopsida (dicotyledons) Order Lamiales (mints, plantains, olives, etc.) Family Oleaceae (olive family) Genus Fraxinus (ashes) Species Fraxinus pennsylvanica (green ash) [subspecies not included]
There is no plant phylum. The order of taxonomy is Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus and species. Plants are all in the kingdom Plantae, and there are many phyla under the Plantae.
Kingdom:Plantae(unranked):Angiosperms(unranked):Eudicots(unranked):RosidsOrder:RosalesFamily:RosaceaeSubfamily:RosoideaeGenus:FragariaSpecies:F.× ananassa
Mosses are brypohytes (br-eye-yo-fights). They are plants. So the taxonomy (which is what you are asking about ) would be: Kingdom: plants, division: bryophytes, classes: takakiopsida, sphagnopsid, andreaeopsida, andreaeobryopsida, polytrichopsida, bryopsida, family: a subset of the above, genus: you can look it up, species - that is very "specific" (get it?)... You can buy sphagnum moss at most nurseries...
Domain,Kingdom,Phylum,Class,Order,FamilyGenus and Species. Grrrrrrr.... Itsz Hayylli.Biihhhh. =] Domain,Kingdom,Phylum,Class,Order,FamilyGenus and Species. Grrrrrrr.... Itsz Hayylli.Biihhhh. =] Domain,Kingdom,Phylum,Class,Order,FamilyGenus and Species. Grrrrrrr.... Itsz Hayylli.Biihhhh. =]
there are only 5 groups: protoctists, bacteria, fungi, animals and plants. If you mean the levels of classification then there are 7: 1)kingdom 2)phylum 3)class 4)order 5)family 6)genus 7)species
Daisies are plants, and plants don't have quite the same strict taxonomic breakdown as animals do. Moreover, daisies are a family of plants and not a specific species. Kingdom: Plantae Order: Asterales Family: Asteraceae Anything in this family is a 'daisy'.
Kingdom: Plantae Phylum: Tracheophyta (vascular plants)