BORDER COLLIE (Canis lupus familiaris "Border collie")
Domain: Eukarya
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Infraclass: Eutheria
Order: Carnivora
Suborder: Carniformia
Family: Canidae
Genus: Canis
Species: Lupus
Subspecies: Familiaris
Breed: Border Collie
i hate black people
A taxanomic tree.
The Scientific name of the Mosquito is Variesthese are also their Taxanomic groupings:kingdom-animaliaphylum-arthropodaclass-insectaorder-dipteraThe Best Guess For The Scientific Name Of A Mosquito Is Culicidae
Orders are divided into Families. The hierarchy of clasification of living things most generally used is, from broadest to narrowest: * Domain * Kingdom * Phylum * Class * Order * Family * Genus * Species For more information, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_classification
If something is caused by humans, then it is referred to as being anthropogenic. For instance, the carbon dioxide in the air due to human industry is said to be anthropogenic carbon dioxide. Human Error: Example Bushe's declaration of war against shadows! Homo: Taxanomic name for man< Latin hom, man.
In most plants, the nucleus of a root cell typically contains the same number of chromosomes as the rest of the plant's cells, which can vary depending on the plant species. In general, plant cells usually have multiple sets of chromosomes, unlike animals that typically have just two sets.
They are both animals. That's about it, the two taxanomic groups are about as far apart as is possible in the animal kingdom. I think the only thing less related to a snake than a snail would be something like coral...
Insects are animals, just as cats andelephants and whales and you and I are- but I'm not sure what level you are looking for.Living things are divided taxanomically into two Kingdoms: Plants and Animals (though bacteria and virii inhabit a sort of twilight in between).At their most basic, allanimals from single-celled amoebae to we humans are living organisms that differ from the Plant Kingdom in being mobileand sentient to at least some degree, i.e. they can respond to physical or chemical stimuli -but are notnecessarilyaware of themselves.Beyond that, for both plants and animals, you enter the world ofTaxonomy, dividing them allinto"family trees" that end in the individual genus andspecies, plus if applicable, variation,name in Latin.On that Animal Kingdon tree therefore we are Hominids,making our genus and species name Homo Sapiensis.(Note: the Latin words, starting with capital letters,should be eitheritalicised or underlined,by scientific convention. Answerskeeps removing the italicising I had applied from its own tool-bar.)The same applies even if the species is known known now only as a fossil. E.g., Titanites Giganteus was a large ammonite, a marine animal resembling a squid with a big, coiled shell, butknown now only as impressive fossilsfound in the late-Jurassic marine Portlandianlimestone.Latin and the taxanomic structure are used for international understanding, so a biologist in one country can understand the names in a formal paper or text-book written in another with a different language.
When Carl Linnaeus first devised his taxanomic system he started with three major kingdoms, Animals, Plants, and Minerals. We dropped the minerals kingdom a long time ago, but we still have the other two: Animalia and Plantae. All living things will fall into one or other of these kingdoms.Kingdoms are divided into a number of Phylums, Phylums divided into a number of Classes, and on through Order, Family, and Genus. In more recent years, Subkingdom, Subphylum, Subclass, and others have been added.So, the full taxonomy of a domestic cat isKingdom: AnimaliaSubkingdom: EumetazoaPhylum: ChordataSubphylum: VertebrataClass: MammaliaSubclass: TheriaOrder: CarnivoraSuborder: FeliformiaFamily: FelidaeSubfamily: FelinaeGenus: FelisSpecies: CatusAnd for the honey bee: Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ArthropodaClass: InsectaInfraclass: NeopteraSuperorder: EndopterygotaOrder: HymenopteraSuborder: ApocritaFamily: ApidaeSubfamily: ApinaeTribe: ApiniGenus: ApisSpecies: MelliferaSo, as you can see, the only thing they have in common is the Kingdom. The cat and bee are both classified in the kingdom "animalia" simply for the fact that they are both multicellular Eukaryota organisms.