Type your answer here... Salvia pretensis
a plant
It is Plantae.
Linnaeus didn't have a famous experiment, he developed the current system of plant taxonomy. Do you perhaps mean Mendell and the pea experiments?
Carolus Linnaeus real name is Carl Linnaeus. There is no real reason why he changed his name however he does get confused with his son whose name is Carolus Linnaeus the Younger. He also went by the name of Von Linne when he was ennobled in 1761.
The species of plant known as banksia was named after Sir Joseph Banks, one of the botanists aboard James Cook's ship, the Endeavour, which sailed between 1768 and 1771. The name Banksia was selected and made public in April 1782 by Carl von Linne or Carolus Linnaeus the Younger.
Linnaeus named the Animalia and Plantae Kingdoms. Linnaeus named two kingdoms by the names Animalia and Plantae kingdoms. He also ordered them from the largest to the smallest.
"If a tree dies, plant another in its place" ~Carl Linnaeus
a plant
Linnaeus named the Animalia and Plantae Kingdoms. Linnaeus named two kingdoms by the names Animalia and Plantae kingdoms. He also ordered them from the largest to the smallest.
It is Plantae.
Carl von Linné a.k.a. Carolos von Linnaeus named it in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae.
Carolus Linnaeus named wolf canis lupus in 1758.
The scientific name is MUSCA DOMESTICA LINNAEUS.* Musca domestica, (Linnaeus was the man who named the house fly)
Carl Linnaeus' book on plant classification is called "Species Plantarum." It was published in 1753 and is considered a foundational work in botanical taxonomy.
Because he believed it to be a “gift from heaven.”
The butterfly was named by Carolus Linnaeus in 1758. In the same year Linnaeus published a book called "Systema Natura". He used classical mythology and specific names to specify his work. In the first group was Equites or knights. The Ulysses butterfly is named in the second group, the Achaen Army.
Perhaps the question should be "named by a botanist?" Hydrangea - or one of the plants known as the Christmas Flower (also Euphorbia pulcherrima/ Poinsettia) was first named by Carl Linnaeus - the "father" of modern botanical taxonomy.