classification
False. The classification group that is made up of only one type of organism that can reproduce only with others like itself is a species, not a genus. A genus is a broader classification group that contains one or more closely related species.
Very hard to say, but I suspect the archaebacteria are the least related to all other organisms (not just humans) as their common ancestor with other organisms is only shortly after the origin of life on earth. They are so distant that they even use a few amino acids in some of their proteins that no other organism today uses!
They are related in that they are both mammals, but they are in different orders, the lemur is in Primates whereas the raccoon is in Carnivora, making them not closely related at all. Their similar appearance/coloration is not due to genetic similarities.
The domains Bacteria and Archaea are composed of only unicellular organisms. These organisms are prokaryotic and lack a true membrane-bound nucleus in their cells.
There is no single kingdom that is unicellular. All prokaryotes (organisms with no cell nucleus) are unicellular, and they belong to two domains, bacteria and archaea. Eukaryotes, or organisms with a cell nucleus, are divided into four kingdoms, plants, fungi, animals, and protists (although recently scientists began to reclassify protists into multiple separate kingdoms). In each of the fungi and protist kingdoms, there are a variety of members that are unicellular, and also some members that are multicellular. Animals and plants are always multicellular (except possibly one animal group called Myxozoa).
Animalia contains only multicellular organisms.
No. Tuataras are more closely related to lizards and snakes than to dinosaurs. Dinosaurs are more closely related to crocodiles and even more closely related to birds, which are their only living descendants.
Protista
Rhododendrons and azaleas are closely related. Rhododendrons have 10 or more stamens per lobe. Azaleas have only five. Most rhododendron are evergreen and azaleas are deciduous.
technically, all animals in the animal kingdom are related. mamals are even more closely related.
They can, but only closely related species can do that naturally (such as some poeciliids).
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.
the more classification levels that two organisms share
The ONLY similarity or relationship between 'gnarled ' and 'gracious ' is they both begin with 'G'.
Only dogs and closely related species such as wolves can successfully breed with dogs.
True domians of bacteria and protists contian only prokaryote organisms. not all the time the bacteria will work like its needs to work. :)
The Kingdom Plantae only contains autotrophs.