yes beacause they are the samefamily of mammals
In taxonomy, individuals in the same class must also be in the same phylum but may or may not be in the same order. Taxonomy organizes life into a hierarchy, where each level categorizes organisms based on shared characteristics. While all members of a class share certain traits, they can differ significantly at the order level.
Taxonomy was discover by Carl Linneaus. Taxonomy is the classification of all living organisms.
Dog can breed dog. It can have same species.
The location of a zoo that an animal is kept in will have nothing at all to do with its taxonomy. Taxonomy is the technical word for its classification, and that stays the same no matter where the animal is moved to or from. Sometimes classification will have to do with its location, but the animal's species does not change because it has been moved.
no if you think it is then all are really all dog are all the same
Gray wolf (Canis lupus) is a generic term that applies to the species of wolf that has a number of subspecies including the common dog (Canis lupus familiaris) and even the dingo (Canis lupus dingo) and a number of others. All are members of the same Canis lupus species.
Organisms that are in the same genus, which is the level just above species in the taxonomy chart, are most closely related. They share more recent common ancestors compared to organisms in the same family, order, or class.
The taxonomy is the scientific name given to classify organisms. Full Taxonomy Common Name: Australian Cattle Dog Category: Mammals » Dogs Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: MammaliaOrder: CarnivoraFamily: CanidaeGenus: CanisSpecies: familiaris Courtesy Centralpets.com
Evolutionary taxonomy is the classification of using both phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary changes. This type of taxonomy concentrates on all of taxa instead of just a single species.
Taxonomy
Same as humans
Old stocky shepherd dog of rottweil Germany, developed through the sport of schutzhund, a strong large robust superior guard dog with a short course coat ( never was a cart pulling dog of Roman Italy )