No. The heirarchy goes...kingdom, phylum, genus, species, so kingdom is the broadest of the terms, and phylum is more specific.
The sequence that exhibits an increasingly more-inclusive scheme of classification is: Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. This is known as the hierarchy of biological classification, with each level becoming more specific and inclusive than the previous one.
Yes, phylum is more inclusive than family in biological classification. Phylum is a higher taxonomic rank that groups together organisms with similar body plans, while family is a lower rank that groups together organisms with similar characteristics within a particular phylum.
The species is the least inclusive taxonomic category as it consists of individual organisms that share similar characteristics and can interbreed to produce fertile offspring. It is more specific than the other categories listed (domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus).
No, a phylum is a taxonomic rank higher than genius. A phylum contains one or more genuses.
domain
Genus. Organisms that are in the same phylum and family may belong to different genera because the family level is more inclusive than the genus level of classification.
Phylum is the level of classification narrower than Kingdom. There is no single Kingdom subdivided into Phyla; they all are.
A kingdom may be subdivided into more than one Phylum. Several subdivisions known as phyla are the ones that make up a kingdom.
Phylum. It is a broad taxonomic rank that comes below kingdom and consists of multiple classes.
Because the domain is a larger, more inclusive category than a kingdom.
In classifying life on Earth, the largest level of classification is the Kingdom. Thus, it is the most inclusive, because a step up from kingdom would simply be "life".
Imperfect fungi