phenotype
Biologists do not use physical appearance alone to classify organisms. They also do not use common names, as these can be misleading and vary between regions. Additionally, biologists do not use a single characteristic or trait to classify organisms because diversity among species can make this method unreliable.
Scientists group organisms based on their shared characteristics and evolutionary relationships. This classification system is known as taxonomy, which organizes organisms into categories such as kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. Modern taxonomy uses genetic and physical similarities to determine these groupings.
bacteria, trilobites, lizards, rhinoceros
The physical expressions of a gene are known as an organism's phenotype. This includes observable traits such as physical appearance, behavior, and other characteristics that result from the interaction between an organism's genetic makeup and its environment.
Organisms made of only one cell are known as unicellular organisms. Examples include bacteria, archaea, protists, and some types of fungi. These organisms carry out all essential functions for life within a single cell.
phenotype
The phenotype.
an organisms phiscal appearance
It is known as their genome.
False. An organisms physical appearance is its phenotype.
genotype
Genotype
The appearance of the most complex and the greatest diversity of organisms on Earth occurred during the Cambrian Period, around 541 million years ago. This period is known as the "Cambrian Explosion" due to the rapid diversification of multicellular life forms.
That appearance is known as the arraignment.
They are classified by behavior, reproduction, metabolism and appearance.
The appearance of ununoctium is not known.
consumers