Morphology and taxonomy are used to classify organisms and now DNA studies are part of it.
magnifying glass and microscope
Taxonomy and Dichotomous keys
random bla
if they reproduce sexually or asexually
I think its To show accurate relationships between types of organisms and to group them into Linnaean categories
1. blue under microscope 2. turn white when heated
Binomial Nomenclature classifies organisms with two names each. The first of the two is the name of the Genus that the organism is in. The second name is the name of the Species itself. These two names are then combined to form the full name of the organism.
Before the 1600's, many scientists divided organisms into two groups: plants and animals. But as more organisms were discovered, some did not fit into eaither group. In the 1700's, CarolusLinnaes, a Swedish scientist founded modern taxonomy. Taxonomy- is the science of describing, classifying, and naming living things based on their shape and structure.
They are unicellular organisms with no defined nucleas.
genus and species
if they reproduce sexually or asexually
I think its To show accurate relationships between types of organisms and to group them into Linnaean categories
The naming convention is the same throughout the world
The naming convention is the same throughout the world
morphology and biochemistry
I think its To show accurate relationships between types of organisms and to group them into Linnaean categories
Aristotle classified living organisms by dividing them into two groups; those with red blood and those without. brug
there bones and skeletal system, what they look like and what there habbittat is
Color, size, extremities, where they live, how they move Most of the determinations of how to classify were done by male scientists. Some female scientist did some other classification of some plants that were different from the typical male classification and that were very reasonable. So then there were two ways to classify. In one, these two are closest, but in the other those two are closest. Which shows us that classification of species is somewhat dependent on who does it. Don't ask my cat.
genus apecies