Class
Phylum you can remember itl Ike this king Philip came over for grape sodak-kingdomp-phylumc-classo-orderf-familyg-genuiss-spieces
A phylum is a taxonomic rank in biological classification that groups organisms based on shared characteristics. It is a level above class and below kingdom in the hierarchy of classification. Organisms within the same phylum share certain fundamental features in their anatomy, physiology, and development.
If kingdom is an option it's kingdom. If not then the answer is phylum
Phylum is the stage above class and below kingdom. There are two categories in phylum: eukaryote and prokaryote. Eukaryotes have well defined cell membranes and nuclei, while a prokaryote doesn't. This can already separate the different classes into different categories, which is evidently the goal of taxonomy -- to classify organisms.
The second largest level in today's classification system is the domain. It is the broadest level and includes three main groups: Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya.
The hierarchy of biological classification is: Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
* Domain * Kingdom * Phylum * Class * Order * Family * Genus * Species
The largest level of classification in a kingdom is the phylum.
phylum
Phylum
Humans and lizards share the same level of classification as vertebrates, belonging to the Phylum Chordata.
The second broadest level of taxonomic classification is the phylum. It is one level below kingdom, and organisms within the same phylum share similar characteristics and evolutionary histories.
Here's the whole taxonomic hierarchy:DomainKingdomPhylumClassOrderFamilyGenusSpecies
Class
The Order would have the smallest level of classification out of the options provided (kingdom, phylum, order). Order is a classification level under phylum and would have fewer groups of organisms compared to phylum or kingdom.
Class is smaller than phylum and contains orders.
Phylum you can remember itl Ike this king Philip came over for grape sodak-kingdomp-phylumc-classo-orderf-familyg-genuiss-spieces