no it is not
Mammalia is more specific than Animalia. Mammalia is a subphylum within the animal kingdom that includes animals that are warm-blooded, have hair or fur, and produce milk for their young. Animalia, on the other hand, is a broader classification that includes all animals, including mammals, birds, fish, insects, and more.
Yes, kingdom is a more general taxonomic rank than family. Kingdom is the broadest categorization, grouping organisms into broad categories like Animalia or Plantae, while family is a more specific grouping within an order and consists of related genera.
There are more than 300 species in 29 families, so you need to be much more specific. But they have at least this much in common: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Mollusca Class: Cephalopoda Order: Teuthida
In taxonomy, a domain is the highest taxonomic rank of organisms, representing the broadest category. There are three domains in the classification system: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. These domains are based on differences in cell structure and organization.
Organisms in the domain Eukarya have membrane-bound organelles, a nucleus, and multiple linear chromosomes, while organisms in the domain Archaea lack membrane-bound organelles, have a single circular chromosome, and their cell walls are chemically different. Eukaryotes generally have more complex cellular structures and processes than archaea.
Animalia. (Eukarya includes Protists, Animalia, Plantae, and Fungi)
Domain Eukarya, or eukaryotic organisms, are pretty much organisms with a nucleus(eukaryote comes from greek meaning "true kernel/nut", referring to the presence of the nucleus). This is opposed to the prokaryotic organisms and archaea, which do not have a nucleus.
In biological taxonomy, a domain is the highest taxonomic rank of organisms, higher than a kingdom. Corals belong to domain Eukarya, kingdom Animalia, and phylum CnidariaCoral.
Mammalia is more specific than Animalia. Mammalia is a subphylum within the animal kingdom that includes animals that are warm-blooded, have hair or fur, and produce milk for their young. Animalia, on the other hand, is a broader classification that includes all animals, including mammals, birds, fish, insects, and more.
Yes, kingdom is a more general taxonomic rank than family. Kingdom is the broadest categorization, grouping organisms into broad categories like Animalia or Plantae, while family is a more specific grouping within an order and consists of related genera.
eukaryote. prokaryotes don't have a complex cell structure separated by membranes. pretty much any organism larger than a single cell is going to a eukaryote.
There are more than 300 species in 29 families, so you need to be much more specific. But they have at least this much in common: Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Mollusca Class: Cephalopoda Order: Teuthida
No. Bees are Eukaryotes, because they have more than one cell to make it an organism. Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms.
eukaryotes have organelles in membranes.
No, a liver cell is a eukaryotic cell. Eukaryotic cells, like liver cells, have a well-defined nucleus that contains the cell's genetic material and are more complex than prokaryotic cells, which lack a nucleus.
TRUE
A molecule.