The seven classification groups, from most general to most specific, are kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species.
It is Domain.
The largest group in the classification system is the domain, which includes three major groups: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. These domains encompass all living organisms on Earth and serve as the highest level of classification.
According to taxonomic hierarchies (taxa), the major classification group is called "superkingdom", followed by "kingdom", "suprakingdom" and "domains". Superkingdom is a taxa with only use for a better classification, not a natural classification, it makes it easier to group organisms. The largets group is superkingdom Prokarya, the one concerned with bacterias, followed by kingdom fungi.
Escherichia coli fits into the domain and kingdom of Bacteria because members of this group are unicellular microorganisms.
The group with the largest number of organisms is kingdom, followed by phylum, class, order, and family in the Linnaean classification system. The number of organisms typically decreases as you move from higher to lower taxonomic levels.
Organism is the general and therefore largest classification group for the body. The next smallest classification is the organ system.
The largest classification subgroup is the group "kingdoms." As the domain is the most general classification and the starting point of classification, kingdom is the largest as it's the first subgroup.
It is Domain.
No
No
phylum
kingdom...i think
the kingdom
kingdom you dumbasses
The largest group in the classification system is the domain, which includes three major groups: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. These domains encompass all living organisms on Earth and serve as the highest level of classification.
The largest classification group in taxonomy is Domain, which includes three main categories: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. These domains encompass all known living organisms on Earth.
phylum