I believe that you are looking for Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. I use the mnemonic device "King Peter Can't Order Fairy Godmother South" to remember it, but my teacher likes to say "Kings Play Chess On Fat Girls' Stomachs". If you make up your own, then it will stick with you better.
A cardinal is in the animal kingdom of life.
Animalia (animal) Kingdom
Human beings are classified in kingdom Animalia.
The crayfish is a crustacean, and all crustaceans belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya, which are characterised by having cells with nuclei. Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Animalia, as well as the Kingdoms Plantae, Fungi and Protista.
bateria are in the animal kingdom
yes. and it is in the sub kingdom of marsupial
The animal kingdom is divided into two large groups: vertebrates, which have a spine or backbone (like humans, birds, and fish), and invertebrates, which do not have a backbone (like insects, jellyfish, and worms).
Theprotoctist kingdom is divided into "Plant-like protist" , "Animal-like protist" and "fungi- like protist"
The animal kingdom is divided into five groups for classification purposes. They are called Ctenophora, Porifera, Placozoa, Cnidaria, and Bilateria.
Kingdom Animalia is divided in Phylla not in sub phylla , your question is non logical . Number of sub phylla varies in different classification systems and even by differrent experts .
Warm blooded and cold blooded
yes, its split into vertebrates and invertebrates
Yes, mammals are divided into many sub-groups.
animal kingdom is divided into two parts. Mainly prokaryote and eukaryotes.
Divided Kingdom was created in 2005.
Animal kingdom, order insects- sub-class lepidoptera. all butterflies are classed as Lepidoptera and a lepidoptrist is an expert or collector of butterflies and moths.
The animal kingdom is divided into smaller groups called vertebrates and invertebrates. Vertebrates are those animals with backbones and endoskeletons and invertebrates lack a backbone and generally have the skeleton on the outside of their bodies.