NO
Order
There are over 2000 species of gecko in the world so you'll have to be more specific than that. I can tell you that all species of gecko belong to the Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Reptilia, Order: Squamata, and Family: Gekkonidae.
Yes, species within the same family are more closely related to each other than species within the same order. Family is a taxonomic rank that is more specific and shows a closer genetic relationship between species, while order is a broader taxonomic rank that includes multiple families.
Genus is more specific than order. The hierarchy of biological classification starts with domain, then moves through kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species. Genus is a taxonomic rank that is more specific than order.
An example of an organism that is in the same genus but a different species is the lion (Panthera leo) and the tiger (Panthera tigris). Both lions and tigers belong to the genus Panthera, but they are distinct species within that genus.
Moonflowers belong to the Ipomoea family. More than 500 species are counted in this large group.
No. If they do not belong to the same class, they can't be in the same order or family. The classification goes: Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
Yes. "Family" is a more precise designation than "order." The levels, from most general to most specific, are Kingdom -- Phylum -- Class -- Order -- Family -- Genus -- species.
Snakes are not a single species, nor do they belong to a single genus. Snakes are a suborder of reptiles that contains 3,400 known species in over 500 genera. They belong to the suborder Serpentes in the order Squamata.
Order
They belong to the phylum Platyhelminthes. One species, the cucumber tapeworm, scientific name Dipylidium caninum has genus is Dipylidium and its species is caninum. However, there are more than 1 species of tapeworm. If you want to find genus or species you'll have to Google it.
well algea is a nippy and yeast is a whippey
There are over 2000 species of gecko in the world so you'll have to be more specific than that. I can tell you that all species of gecko belong to the Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Reptilia, Order: Squamata, and Family: Gekkonidae.
The more than 8,000 species of diatoms are the largest group in the phylum Chrysophyta of the kingdom Protista.
Yes, species within the same family are more closely related to each other than species within the same order. Family is a taxonomic rank that is more specific and shows a closer genetic relationship between species, while order is a broader taxonomic rank that includes multiple families.
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.
There are more species than there are families.