to organize data
Uhh I think you are either confused or talking about the dichotomous key tree. It is something scientists use to identify cells and creatures and was invented by a swedish scientist named Carl Linneaus.
Dichotomous key
Scientists classify organisms by the dichotomous key. They classify by looking at if it moves or not, then they look at characteristics, then they can see what they are.
Dichotomous keys are more accurate and are much more detailed tha fieldguids
== == A dichotomous key is used to classify a newly found organism.
to organize data
It makes identification easy .
A swedish scientist named Carl Linneaus (I think that is how you spell it)
The first dichotomous key is generally credited to Theophrastus, a Greek philosopher and scientist from ancient Greece. He created a system to identify plants based on specific characteristics in his work "Enquiry into Plants."
Uhh I think you are either confused or talking about the dichotomous key tree. It is something scientists use to identify cells and creatures and was invented by a swedish scientist named Carl Linneaus.
When the scientist isn't sure what an organism or animal is, he or she would then go through all of the questions until they reach the end where the name of the cell or animal would be, or maybe they could find that it is a new discovery.
a dichotomous key is a key a dichotomous key is a key
Dichotomous key
A dichotomous key is a means of scientifically labeling cats. Yes, there is a dichotomous key for domestic cats; it is felis cactus.
A dichotomous key is used to categorize plants and animals. They are used when classifying a newly-discovered species. Categorizing new species is sometimes called 'keying out' the species.
dichotomous key can be improved when by changing the tree structure into a directed acyclic graph