Could you? We have done that already,and salmon are a recent example of that
Molds belong to the kingdom Fungi and can be classified into various genera, such as Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Rhizopus. Each genus of mold may have different characteristics and growth habits.
Genus and Family are different levels in the classification system used to distinguish all the organism we encounter. The hierarchy (ordered from most general to most specific) is as follows: Kingdom -> Phylum -> Class -> Order -> Family -> Genus -> Species
The second part of the scientific name, known as the specific epithet, provides specific information about the organism such as its characteristics, habitat, or who discovered it. It helps differentiate between different species within the same genus.
Yes, Ficus benjamina and Ficus lyrata belong to the same genus Ficus, but they are different species within the genus. They are not closely related in terms of their specific characteristics and growth habits.
The genus name for the koala is Phascolarctos.
The Stone age began with the first speacies in our genus and, in very few places, countinues to this day. The bronze age began in different places at different times, so you should be asking when <whatever culture> entered the bronze age.
there is no other between the genus speacies of one kind of molecullar system
No, it couldn't. +== Different genus & species!
The genus rank of different organisms is different. It is used to classify biological organisms.
It depends. There are many types of eagles, with many different genus'. The bald eagle is in the Haliaeetus Genus.
easy. tigers are in the cat genus. wolves, dog genus. different species
Ulmaridae family, and it is the only member of its genus yet identified.
No, animals in the same genus belong to the same class. The genus is a taxonomic rank above the species level but below the family level. Animals in the same genus share more similarities than animals in different genera.
There are many different genus of sea cucumbers, but they are all in the class Holothuroidea.
No, not normally. Please not that animals belonging to a different genus can NEVER be of the same species.
No, not normally. Please not that animals belonging to a different genus can NEVER be of the same species.
its genus