The classification of organisms from general to specific goes: Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. Therefor, two species the same Genus MUST be members of the same Family. However, a Family may consist of several different Genus, so species in the same Family are not necessarily members of the same Genus.
As a taxonomic descriptor, genus falls between Family and Species; "Dogs belong to the same genus as wolves"
They're different members of the same plant family. What we traditionally call rice belongs to the Oryza genus, while wild rice belongs to the Zizania genus. Both are members of the Poaceae, or grass family.
Fbh
The levels of classification for all organisms is as following (from broadest to narrowest) Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. So organisms that have the same species will be most alike.
they almost have the same property -erick
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
No; if they belong to the same genus then they have to belong to the same family.
Members of the same species would have the most similar DNA, as they belong to the same species and share a more recent common ancestor compared to members of the same genus or order.
They are of the same genus, not species
Two organisms belonging to the same genus always belong to the same family.
Species that are in the same family are more closely related than species that are only in the same order. The biological classification of family falls between order and genus.
No, domestic cats and humans do not belong to the same family, genus, or species. Domestic cats belong to the family Felidae, genus Felis, and species Felis catus, while humans belong to the family Hominidae, genus Homo, and species Homo sapiens.
In the classification of organisms, family is a higher taxonomic rank than genus, and genus is a higher rank than species. Organisms that belong to the same genus are more closely related than those in the same family, and organisms in the same species are the most closely related.
Genus is a taxonomic rank used in biological classification to group species that are closely related and share common characteristics. It sits above species and below family in the hierarchy of classification. Members of the same genus are more closely related to each other than they are to species in other genera.
Family. A genus is a taxonomic rank that includes one or more species that share similarities. Species within the same genus are grouped together based on common characteristics and are further classified into the same family.
As a taxonomic descriptor, genus falls between Family and Species; "Dogs belong to the same genus as wolves"