Most would agree in biosphere
The broadest taxonomic level is the domain. There are three domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
The Biosphere is the fifth and largest level of organization.
The largest and least specific level of organization is the biosphere, which encompasses all ecosystems on Earth. It includes all living organisms and their non-living environment.
The broadest group is Domain or SuperKingdom. This group, which consists of Eukarya, includes the organisms that most people are most familiar with: all animals, plants, fungi, and protists. They also include the vast majority of the organisms that paleontologists work with. Although they show unbelievable diversity in form, they share fundamental characteristics of cellular organization, biochemistry, and molecular biology. kingdom is the highest/most inclusive taxonomic category in the 7 group system Kingdom.......Kids Phylum ..........Prefer Class............Candy Order............Over Family..........Fine Genus ..........Green Species.........Salads Sub-Species A Mnemonic device to remember it.
No, the biosphere is the most encompassing level of organization, which includes all living organisms and their environments on Earth. The ecosystem is a more specific level that includes interactions among living organisms and their surroundings in a particular area.
no
The biosphere is the broadest level of ecology. It encompasses all living organisms and their environments on Earth.
biosphere :D
Domain (it says in my Biology book)
The broadest taxonomic level is the domain. There are three domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Yes, the Domain is the broadest classification level.
kingdoms
The second highest and second broadest classification level for plants and fungi is the division.
Domain is the broadest classification level in the hierarchy of the scientific classification system. It categorizes all living organisms into three main groups: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Domain
kingdom
The broadest level among those listed is "kingdom." This classification represents a broad grouping of organisms that share fundamental features and characteristics.