Well, scientific names come from Latin. Latin is an ancient language that scientists use to give organisms unique names based on their characteristics. It's like giving each plant and animal a special name that scientists all around the world can understand and use.
To understand why you need to know the way they come up with scientific names. It is like this, Genus species, for example Homo sapien. The names are latin and the reason that scientists use latin terms is that all the scientists in the world use the language. They chose a language that was used only in very few areas and now latin is the language that all scientists talk to each other in.
All scientific name must have at least two words that are commonly in Latin.
Scientific names are very specific. The common names of many animals are just that, common. One common name may be the widely accepted name for multiple animals or plants. Common names for plants and animals also vary with region.
Scientific names are specific to each type of organism that they describe, thus there is no scientific name to classify all 'oil seeds'.
Scientific names of all living creatures are in Latin. Occasionally a Greek word will be used, or a "latinized" word will be created if none exists. An example of this is the scientific name for a particular owl mite, named "Strigophilus garylarsonii,'' apparently named after the creator of the "Far Side" comic strip, Gary Larson. The scientific name consists of the genus and species, the last two categories in the taxonomical classification of the living organism in question.
All scientists recognize this language.
To understand why you need to know the way they come up with scientific names. It is like this, Genus species, for example Homo sapien. The names are latin and the reason that scientists use latin terms is that all the scientists in the world use the language. They chose a language that was used only in very few areas and now latin is the language that all scientists talk to each other in.
Yes, all organisms have scientific names. Thus planarians have scientific names too.
Yes, they have.
Not all of them are named, and most of those who are just have scientific names.
All scientific name must have at least two words that are commonly in Latin.
Scientific names are very specific. The common names of many animals are just that, common. One common name may be the widely accepted name for multiple animals or plants. Common names for plants and animals also vary with region.
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Scientific names are specific to each type of organism that they describe, thus there is no scientific name to classify all 'oil seeds'.
Scientific names of all living creatures are in Latin. Occasionally a Greek word will be used, or a "latinized" word will be created if none exists. An example of this is the scientific name for a particular owl mite, named "Strigophilus garylarsonii,'' apparently named after the creator of the "Far Side" comic strip, Gary Larson. The scientific name consists of the genus and species, the last two categories in the taxonomical classification of the living organism in question.
Common names like "rose" for a plant or "dog" for an animal are used to identify living organisms in everyday language. These names can vary by region and language and may not always be unique to a specific species, leading to potential confusion. Scientific or Latin names are typically used for precise identification.
The two-word Latin names are essential to scientists because they are the common names that scientists all over the world use in the same way, relardless of their own language, to describe the family and species (hence the two words) of all living things. Without the Latin name, scientist would be endlessly looking in dictionaries to find out which organism exactly a scientist from another country was describing in an article or book and there would be endless misunderstandings between them if all countries and language groups had their own way of naming and classifying living organisms.