It isn't, Domain is the broadest level of classification.
No, the species is not the most specific level in the classification system. The most specific level is the individual organism. The classification system moves from broad categories like domain and kingdom to more specific levels like phylum, class, order, family, genus, and finally species.
No, genus and species are different taxonomic ranks in the classification of organisms. A genus is a group of related species, while a species is the most specific level of classification representing a group of organisms that interbreed and produce fertile offspring.
Genus is more specific than phylum. Phylum is a high-level taxonomic rank that groups organisms based on shared body plans, while genus is a rank that groups similar species together based on shared characteristics.
class
species
A kingdom is a broad classification category in taxonomy that groups organisms based on shared characteristics, while a genus is a more specific classification level that groups closely related species. In the taxonomic hierarchy, kingdom is more general and higher up than genus.
"Aureus" is not a classification level; it is a species name within the Staphylococcus genus. The classification levels for organisms are Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, and Species. Staphylococcus aureus belongs to the domain Bacteria, the phylum Firmicutes, the class Bacilli, the order Bacillales, the family Staphylococcaceae, the genus Staphylococcus, and the species aureus.
The second lowest is Genus.
Genus=Grus
Yes, typically there are more organisms in a genus level than in an order level. A genus is a more specific classification than an order, so there are usually fewer orders but more genera within those orders.
Classification within biology has 8 main levels of classification: domain (e.g eukaryota), kingdom (e.g animalia), phylum (chordata- those that have a spinal cord), class (mammalia), order (primates), family (homindae), genus (homo), species (sapiens). This shows the descending rank for Homo Sapiens.