Choanoflagellates are the group of protists most closely related to animals, including humans. Choanoflagellates are known for their distinctive cell morphology.
Thesus monkey is the most closely related to Humans because it has the least number of differences in cytochrome c.
Come out, appear, step into sight...
None is part of the other, but the two are closely related. Lots of practical applications of math appear, precisely, in physics.
Certain inherited diseases and conditions are more likely to appear in children who have closely related parents than in children whose parents are not closely related. The specific conditions involved are often different, depending on the ethnic group the parents come from.
They appear similar, but they are not the same creature. Snow leopards are actually more closely related to cheetahs than they are to actual leopards.
Technically, there could be thousands of answers, as two animals can have the exact same hierarchy except for the species. There can not necessarily be two "closest related species". There are, however, instances where animals of the same species have made different adaptations. Such as in one type of hummingbird living in South America, the female has a longer, more curved beak than that of the male because they feed on different flowers.
The dog tags do appear when you melee/knife kill someone in Battlefield 3, you just have to look really closely. See related link below.
Anger is closely related to fear. Since fear is a primal emotion, anger will be displayed as soon as the baby learns to fear.
Your right... there is no such thing as "rare" animals.
Spirochetes are a phylum of bacteria characterized by their helical shape and unique method of motility using axial filaments. These bacteria are known to cause diseases such as Lyme disease and syphilis in humans. They are found in diverse environments, including in the soil, water, and within the bodies of animals.
One Certain Protists live in colonies which can appear to be a single organism, however they show no differentiation into tissues.
In a 33 chapter microbiology book, 'The Protists' do not Appear until Chapter Number 26! They include five types of Algae, four types of Protozoa, one yeast and six fungi and The Slime Molds.