There are many different species of monkeys (simian primates), each with its unique 7-level classification. For example, for the olive baboon:
Kingodm: Animalia (animals)
Phylum: Chordata (hollow dorsal notochord)
Class: Mammalia (mammals)
Order: Primates
Family: Cercopithecidae (old world monkeys)
Genus: Papio (baboons)
Species: Papio Anubis (olive baboons)
7 levels of classification from broadest to most specific level
Whaat are the seven levels of classification for a mountain zebra
There are many different species of monkeys (simian primates), each with its unique 7-level classification. For example, for the olive baboon: Kingodm: Animalia (animals) Phylum: Chordata (hollow dorsal notochord) Class: Mammalia (mammals) Order: Primates Family: Cercopithecidae (old world monkeys) Genus: Papio (baboons) Species: Papio Anubis (olive baboons)
No, since Aristotle, the greek philosopher, only created 7 classification levels, so we stick with that.
sampaghuita
7 Classification levels of a dragonflyKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: InsectaOrder: OdonataFamily: LibellulidaeGenus: LibellulaSpecies: flavidaBy: Logan G.
Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Mammalia Order: Primates Family: Cercopithecidae Genus: Macaca Species: Macaca mulatta (for Rhesus monkeys as an example)
Cavia porcellus I think.
The domain is Eukara, and the kingdom is Protista.
The 7 levels classification for bats are: Kingdom - Animalia, Phylum - Chordata, Class - Mammalia, Order - Chiroptera, Family - Vespertilionidae (most common family for bats), Genus, and Species.
Capuchin monkeys, by scientific classification, belong in the subfamily Cebinae. Capuchin monkeys are the only monkeys that belong to the Cebinae subfamily.
kingdom:lucidae Phylum:Gymosperms Class:Demoascarsis Order:genusglum